-j-
I
‘,
_
_,
.-
f
-
/
\
.
-.. ’
1
.
.
;c
I \
mPmt
. ..
newsp&
is @$uc@nt
aU@. IJn.lveP&y
of Wa&loo.
’ It is .3X3 editioria;uy mdep@nden$ newspap filt&htxl by, .’ S Imprint l%blications~~~Wakloo, ri cqrjoration w%thout ss 1’ 4a@t& Univh&y of ~atwlo0, Wa,terloq,T ,Ontario: phone SSS/‘ l& @&n&on 2331 or@32. Imprint& a Ynember of-the Ctidian Univer@ty ??e& -(CUP); a Mudex$ pqss or&niz+tiqn -\ _ -of-63 papers *across Canada. Iti&ir$ is alaAHn@il%3f; qf the> . - / _ ’ _On@@‘0 ‘W&3kljP-New-spa$er Associati ,n . (OWFkQ Jmptit . \ s mshouldbeaddrkssed , ,publ&hes.q3iy FMday d~e.temn. to. “Im~$,.-Campti *ntreL Room 140.“; we aFe Qpe~et. on _% eampk3 with a CompjSet’SlO, paste-up is’*e%wise don6 .’ofi -&anlpu& IlinprintLISSJ!7 0706-7380. / ’ . 8 _.‘,_ / ,, - -I. . ..*’ ’ ., ; 1 ‘c .. , i c/ /\ \ ’ 1 -. . .- / .F _
*-
\
‘\
L .signatures.
’ Fkom
II’
)
..
k_
I
\
\
*
-only 'll,(l60 :, b&fi &ill: has’%any g<ariRg f&&s ’ to it.’ Rural And of cougse,.hhe’studehtsare the integral part of {his ’ , farnil& are’heavily p&alized by having to deduct the ; whole s@te$ We@ust show the resolve of students ’ b studqtits here-at’.UW, we gene%ated the largest single usually ,reducing ” bx, p’.u,t\ting forth a stro6g united front against this ., resp‘onse of any univ’ersity or college in th6proyin&. c value o.f_their l&d and equipment; ’ the lo&n/grant$o notliing: Students dn OSAP still live injustice. UW .studen_ts should)shbw :their supp,ort on Let’s take _a good look aI. .that petition some 9,f us c-9’ ~, t. _ . ,* b6low the poverty liine &ith t:he low living allowance . Mgrh 171by ihowing up to-see Bette Stephenson. signed. ^ _) + gra’ntea them.. Many groups, -including the Ministry, , ’ First, a ‘roil-back of the ?.~9/0~in&ease. pending an -’ ‘Lend your‘support, voice, strength, and vote to the ,, 1. -acknQwledgedhat th’e system is ;ri, desparate nee’d df ac&ssibiJity-study; There is no doubt in the rniedti qf - , +evie&,.but , _ , 1 ,‘\ , 4 1’- _ - +’fee _hike sirike: it 6 sits .I*and-waits; and waits. . ,. .3 . either the Ontario‘Fed-eration of[ S,tudent& (OFS)‘or.the . Mark D’GaEhiel _ i Autonomqu$ fees are a donstant problemthat3posti , ./ ’ ’ ’ / Ministry of’ Coll6ges and uriitrersities that soye ‘.’ / people %tiill’-.not tie ‘able to re’tucn (or &al;t) posts+qndarg institution&hay.. h-ad .to deal with far ‘maliy - ’ je _ se&i.da+y educatibn ivith the increase. It ,is the extent . years. .The qQegtion came’,td a @e&dhwitb the infamous. , -7 PS RosaReporf andiit wouldappear th3.t they&e ndw ‘. of that d?Gage dotie that be&ls..‘to be aksessed. The 1. &ositionS.~~o,non,,.,,,“,: a-reality. Tw&tier educatioi thBygh;:is probably the , d Ministry Gust cd-operate with- OPS-.and begifi the,~. typesettingtechniquesis,amust,and -- -(work imm&liatel~Stit 2f d;‘ne mitid slips away in this . one.single factor which tiZotild m6st-,easily &ad to the ; proficiencvwith A/M500-series _ . Nfashidn, will %e>world realize what it m&y have l&t? destruction o.f the princ\ipl’e of universal accessibility. . , , t -The lmjwint E&or will c’arry kqbipmentwould bean asset.The 1~. +k., TTC n -h*rr. +;nn nrrn+n,t. a7 k-i I responsibilityfor the content: t 111 LI!C uo, a LVVU-ucl 3yat.cq i43 ----+?d clit;aLc universities Succe.+fdla@$cdntshouldb;lvethe -7- However,‘,one question on the stydy remains t; be ‘abilityto organiieand train student administration, and operation of the with-fees iti excess of $10,000 per term al nd other&&h . .- I typesettersiandwill be’preparedto .a&wQred. Assuming the conditions,are ‘rn&T6*nd we I -totally archaic and ibadequaie newspaper.(S)he shouldbe fqcilities. dQtypes&ting.him/herselfto satisfy capableof writing andreporting on \ get a studftwo years from-jnow, what does everyone ’ ” .. *budget ry reiluirements.A typing news,,entertainment, aqd sports. _ -ao when ihdreas>i of 2~30% are announded, as they \ .b 1. H&% at UW; the+most widepy representative body on speed Q9 not lessthan:50words per events, and be p$ficientin feature minuteis reqtired: __--’ ‘.cati$us, the Senate;’ dedided that a%ttidmotis feds writihg.Photographyis an asset. The Production*Mdnager’$llalso Knowledgeof production tech, were ,undes+able. l3tit the Bo&d of ’ G&erno&,berespon$blefor the operation,01 niquesassociatc$ with publishingis / .-ItheImprint’typesetting depart: , conce+n.ed wit,h only financi+issties, pverturned thean asset, as is knowledgeand/or ment,a_facility organizedto do wi!lingnessFodearnthl! operationof decision. At UWO. in London, a com&&ee to study the typesettingfor on andoff-ca’mpus typesettins eauioment.The sucissue. never even consideredthe ’students iTtheir groups. ’ c-eisfulca&dida&will have I A knowledgeofwriting and ‘I majority decisiori.‘/ ’ ’ - ’ experience-workini on’a volunteer ‘~ . -.. reporting Jechnjquesis G asset, as * -I ‘he _ -r.organizatloni skills concerning ‘elri +irer &k&&ledge of%amerae’quipment’ ebof ’ organizatiov and dealiqg with a Metintihile, <Bette “no$a i&velling / I%ad shbw” :. r “4 ‘%b, _ -@en&, and;darkr*F techhique. wide variety of peopleare i 1( Stephensoti,is takin. her act oh the road. This-is juit I. iikcessaty. . I . /r Adkbti6ing -‘-. one exampl of t-he-mady ways Stephenson has misled j ,. I .” Manage+ ,. Ontario’s’st f, dents with conflicting and contradictory ’ -Producti& remarks. While-she rules the Ministry with he_r iron ‘The Imprint AdvertisingManager responsible.forpraiiding sufficient * fist,’ tolerance &vards students and $eitigr?ups-tiill I : Manager*I. isadvertising \ I revenue for the ’ . remain mihimal; .-“,’ L The Imprint ProductionMar&ger newspaper.The su0zessfulcan,’
,- thc$and
Foyr
.TheFoll6\j;ing hid ,:
_.
’
>
I
*.
’
.-
2.
’ 1.
-
”
,
I.
’
I
_.
While
a fee hi‘ke atrike
t;we
, d-
.’
-.
I> r
a
.-
.L
_ .
_ ‘f$tidents ’ -
_ ” \ pla&aristi University,
.: _
10 the February $itled
29 issu& bauglht\
\
_
imprint Libn
w&t,
’ I
i
,y.
/ ~_
\.
._
, . I’mprint ’ ,wishes to ackhowladge , _ _ ,. ( . .~r~aringthiss~r,vey. ’ ,.- , :\ 1,, t .\ -. .
-- i . e I j i . -.>,
why
we&ant
OFS and
publi&ed,:a
stagy
con&rnin,g,
‘the
,icj!“,
-
I
the ’ assistance _ I __ -: , ‘ J .c \
i. Haye 2.‘ .-’
-
carries responsibilitJfor thedesibn andeconomicalproductionof the j newspper. (S)heshouldhave detailedknowledgeof production7 techniques,$nd beable to do proficientpaste-up.Knowledgeof
’
,
YOU eve-r.plagiarized‘an y %- - ri
‘- - -” ’ p
assignments $‘&s
else whb
-,
’
didate will habeexperiencein,sles, reliableoersonaltransoo&tion. and skillsin compositionofadvertising copy. (Typesettirigandpasteup skilisare as$ets)-Familiaritywiththe _ K-W area isan a&et.
it ah-d h$w
t show a united front throuhh thk ’ Federation, of ‘Stud&s. The varidus sdciet.igi and counciels hav& to le‘nd their &DDort to the mat&r. putting Aside any previous argu&&ts !hey ma*&. , .’ , i ,I , ~-
.
.\of l‘computer “&$3&@ments at Bishop’s in/‘-Quebec. We &ould like to gee just
\\
,--
1
is a ;dras&measuri,
[ ‘t.’ -- -TGrnkey desk .ifi the Campus Centre before I&arch 21. The results will:app.&arein the March 28. Imprint. ( / I J$ank you for: your stippo& ’ \’ . \ , _’ ’ r . _
-
I
f
xl_i
or &m No
-I
%‘I
haq ever pladiari+d
,nyes
4*.‘f.Yes, do Yw ‘lGnk they are*** .’
whih -
at UWp
ati assign.men,t
,o.No\,.. ,I . --. - -’
.’
,
‘7
.7 or
. \ I-
-. - 0 Too harsh Cl Too lenient Cl _ Ali right ** I L- I I _ 5. ‘What percentage’of . UW students’ do. you -think:. have plagiarized _’ - ‘. aSsignmSqqttg or exams? i I’ \ ‘,\ . _ . . ’ 0 25-50% “cl -5o-75Yo Cl 75-iOO% , ’ ’ ’ Cl 0-25O/,” -_ _ , I.. . 1 ’ 6. Do‘you’know of$y excba&e of money for plagiarized assignments or of A&&News -ifi -&ams at u&? -. . ’ ..I’ 1 I _ , ._ i , _ ‘/r ., ’ . . 2. L .A3 Pido r ._ . , I \ - L l3 -Yes
- -_ ,Repiesent&ves fropunil versities across, Ontario met with Dr. Bettestephens-onon. Friday; -Febru-?ry 29. The - Ontario Federation of Student’s also met ..bgore the heeting with the Minister of Education and College,s and U’iversities and held a ple’ nary after’wajds. The >first- meeting, sche’ duled’ an hour before that with the Minister, vyas infdr_ mational in nature, affording representatices the oppotitunity- to become aware -of what was happening on other campuses and in the OFS Exectitive. Three newspaper,clippings, all of which ‘- reflected agreement w’it-h _ -students concerned about ’ t-he ‘cos_f and quality ‘of‘ education, and’an OFS fund2 “Why - ing f&t sheet entitled ’ ,, * - - :_ L-, _ -_ - ‘/ L - .
a - ._ _-.are we t&-to lighten our belts?” were distributed.. stressed, , - The’ fact :sh&t _ thgt higher fee& -will not make. up- for underftibding, that to balance the budget by 1983-6,4 ‘(as Treasurer Frank Miller intbnds). tuition fees, will continue-to rise (which, coupled )yith Ontario Stu4ent. Assistance Programme (OSAPl’inadequacjes, meam an increased shifting of the financial burden fro:& ther govtiknment onto itidividuals); and that th_e .pvernme@s policy of restraint will harm rather’ t.han help’. Ontario’s -_econom$ -... The Exec&iLe rkportedthai-it would press Stephenson for a rollback-of the tuition .fee jl incrkase until an accessibility , stuctjr could be made, an end to .autonomous fees and changes ’ Freeman debut
-, in OSAP. These were actions ‘decided up- by the, OFS at its n “la& conference: ’ To these dex&nds, thk QC*cutive added 8” e&l t.o under-- funding, i! government policy. - ,which QFS.has opposed since _the organizatioti’s inc’eption; aed more money for research a& development. Of the fir@ request, thb ETecutiv_e state@ that the government already’ appearedto‘~’ have started a ~ itratification study (_astudy of w&o’ goes. to @versity); but that this-was only the first. step in% ‘complete acc&ss@ility study. A proper study, it was reported, wotild take seveh fol!owing students yegs horn gradeceigbt through the first year of fintversity. Whereas, the Executive offered n‘o hope of the Ministry _b T .L
_
, i
_ ,New’
-execut;ve - ’
I.
.
-h&.,&ini.&d - .-
Y
t *,
-
?
’
.
,
.
I “printers, but that-each ~ould-~ executive th& the incre,a& have a rider on it pointing otit in tuition- would be c0,vere.d by anincrease in OSAP. She ,that changes in OSAP should be ipoked -for. On the ade-was’.uncertain as to _whether‘, the 7.6% increase was tX& brie quacy of the p‘rogramm, she ,to be. *covered, Qr the’ entire said’! “Stunner who%?e res 18,2570 (7;j0~~ with the 10% ceiving assistance have corn-,, plaints about not &ving autonomous fee cbmpounded en it). At different times ~~~~~s ,f3as for their autoStep_henson claimed. botch alternatives. When told thatthe When” the subject of research and developtint came 3.3 millich do&& the Mini-^ up, Stephenson insisted that stry had committed was not more should be developed in gsihg to be enough, she stated_that the mdney would be the private sector, and quesl universities dbtained ip -whatever, way \_. tioned whether are the proper place for a possible. 5 majority of it. The Executive The OF5 yvould have to wait for the Ministry’s anpointed-out that private car.nouncement for ‘any hrth’erporatrons Aren’t likely tb research areas not in their,, statement of-policy; Stephenion.toldit. Often; , best interests (for example, ._ Members xthe OFS were‘ factory owners @ghtl”not extremely displease&by the- want to resear_ch pollution w,iy -the Minister evided canfrols). . ^--issues and refused ‘to commit \ The most telling remark of -x&rself. The phrase, “‘We’ll the day cape when Stephen. . . look into it,” predommated ppays -Eit@dy$i;;. t: y . her responses to questions. tend to day things in!differOn the question of OSAP, ,Igk:ii?e fry farm backLsiephe;o; stated that the ~t~aYs.“~he~~~~~~~~; pamphlets were already at the. _I She also assured .the OFS holding no inc&ase for seven years, it was - felt, that the. Minister might agree to watt for an ihterim r_eport, to be made in-t& pears. \ The Ex$cutive could not foresee an end to autonomqus fees. Changes. to ’ OSAP were expect edv \ however (word fr6m -the MinistEy should come w_ithin’the_next XWO t-o *three- weeks]. The Executive hoped that the parental contribution table-would be Ghinged and th.e living alrowanceraised. c Other changes yhich it wanted; but did not expect, includ’ed ~ removal of. the four-year eligibility cutoff, a raise in the proportion of grants to lbans and a change in the ‘age of independence;’ The only change Stephenson was wil-ling. to acknowledge was the removal of-the . Gross Assets I$gulatlo%\ which will help st’udents
_ -
/
~ L ,’ \, . _ -
_ _ j
. <_ _
, _ r:+ -’ __ __ -, . . I
_ -
,
-
i’ktember l,- 1980. Co&$ On the evening of &Innday prQposed that Prue- Da\iid‘F$+4arch 3, the Federation-of en be givep ad honourarymembers then voted 15-O-2 _.__-,Stud&a-%ad a regular tnenibership in the FederA in favovr of ‘a motionr to support and encoqrage .st& i council* meeting and the _at,icm t of Students for the T aqnual‘ genera! meeting in r wbrthy service,rendered by dents to &ten4 the OFS rally in Tordnto on March 20, in, Federation her -as a secr%$a,ry of the *. Needles’ Hall. lieu df the fact that the Presi&nt Neil Freeman forStudent Federation. A mot mally’ introduced himself to . tion in favour of this propet’ition of the Fe&&ion gf posal passed by-a vote of,l8Students was rejected. f the’ newly elected ‘-council -, A politically embarrasing . -m&nbers and made some O-l (for, against, abstention). On the weekend bf March . Felix Luti and Geoqge ment. situation arose w~hen Fe& 14 an& 15 the Africa’n ‘Stu- I K’hroda will speak-on tlie Follotiing the conclusibn com@ents.. ‘He ,A motion to accept - Mark I . ’ introductary as speaker of the- eration . qouncillor Stephen ’ deti’s Asqociations (AS-A)of natio‘n 6f Kenya. Professpr of the weekend a reception’ stated his feeling‘ that -the ‘Winmtt Yip askedif t efourpaintsin, Federation for the&remainderUW and WL&will spons0.r _ Linda Freeman will$iscuss with Afri&n,. and ,, disco ) F6derationelection ,tia+won the petition % hd, in effect, Africa‘ /Weekend ‘8O.- The the topic -of African-Canadmusid will be held in MC’ _ on the’issues of cutbac_ks in, of this term passed by alvote of 15-O-O. ’ ’ . be$n accepted by Federation ,‘tXeme of the weekend>will be ian_relatibns tid their im5136 beginning at 8:30. . {education and tuition hjkes r council.1 It was rbealed that pact on African Develop,-. - . and Z/hat-“this council owe‘s it \ Federation President Neil the exploration of the develC&a Geiger. _ r-. ‘. ’ / the motion ha& be& tabled L td the studetits to do some-Freeman thendiseassededuopment ofthe African world -th&g about it? ’ cational cutbacks and tuiduring the last Federation .and the political, social- aqd Freetian then announc-ed tioR- hikes.’ He arg+d that meetiqg, and had not been% economk realities ,of this voted tin. A motion toaccept developmetit. The week-end *his -nominatiQBs to’ the ExestudFlits in geneial are’cotithe four points. was prom_ of Speakers and films is co_ cutive -Comi?&tee ’ of the- cerned witti these iss‘qeq as TmZernat-i&al Food-Dar Federation_ of-Students. wirn i,ndicated bz .ihe ,fact- that ulgated -and a -challengitig spqpsored by the -AS&, the .~ Simonis, an arts representover 4000. @dents, faculty debate ensued. : Federation-of Sjudents, the Qne of the main, contept- Grad dltib,’ rhe UW adminative, was novinated as 2nd staff gigtied- a petition; ions as expressed by one of- iitration’and CUSO. - Fedgration Vice$reside<tit. orgqnitied by the Federation ‘Simonis pledged his support ttist of the eve,nts will oEStudents,oppo_singtuition the councillors tias whether increases. Freeman said that .or not the petition indicated take place in room 113 of,the to President Freeman, and cotild accept’ the a polarization of the various Campu_s Centre. It all begins I q( called forithe council to be “students . . motie responsible to and - &ov@l’nment and admini eaculties on -campus. Freeat 2:00 on Friday .March 14. \ man stated that approxiThe greater part of the more. represe$.a.tive of- the t,rati’on demands, or fight _ - ‘students them; since talking 6as not #mately lsjs0 signatures were weekend will jnv.olve on’ this, -campus. recorded during study-&ek, ,.> speeches and seminars given Council ratified his positioii‘ worked.” _ ,5 by representatives @f varvote. ’ zHe cited t<wa examplbs .to . and-jhat in fact, the petition . - with one$issetittig . i,llustrate this point’. First, ‘ma’nifested i~us African govergmehts goodi suppwf TonyWaterman 6%~ nomthe demands o,f the- above__ from all.faculties; The moatid- by several professors. : inate&s,Bo’ardpf Education inentioqed petition= were re- . tion-carried $6-O-3. :As well, a free fil& on Africa ’ - Chai!manv and he irldicated.’ jetted’ by ‘tGe> Miriister df ‘Yip discussed the need for will be shdwti in the- great^ ’ . that he wou!d take a s-trting Colleges and Uni;v’ersities- ,- &e Federatibn of Stud’e’nc tb gall. of the Campus Centre a$ poSition @thin the Feder&3te Steverisoti, at an Ontr ,engage in some for6 of lcmg N 8:00 on Friday, March.14 and / &Oli On' the <LlltiXm hike. arip Federation of Students tetim planning, and> a motion displays af African artifacts issue. Couecil ratified his’ m-&eting in To,rc‘mf-o ov Friday to set up a +domtfiittee td and-art will be set up from positioh.una.nimously: ’ Februgry 29, S&n.dly, Uniinvestiga2e this was tabled 12:00 to-5:09 on ,MaEc,h->5 in of. Waterloo Pregi--’ until-the next-meeting. -cc113. ” 1 Freeman-’ then -I;bminat& _vetisky’ ‘I?he‘High dommissio-ner of .Peter .HGyischairqanoftfie .‘_ d&fit Burt Matthews and.ihe ‘A,t the< Apnual. -Generalof. WaterlQQ : Meeting; the Bo’ard of.DirecTanzania will speak on the ’ - Board of Ext’ernal IQlatiori& University ‘Vi&Z’ ?Board, qf GBvesnog oxer: - tors - @as .Xannevnc$d. They Liberatibn of Rhodesia apd _ 7G&d&I Webb: %‘as’ Wim Sim-the High Comn&+oper of t,o -ire Neil.Fr&man, Ch@irman.cof tlie B@rd of. C.rul-e’d’ a rep&t submitted th6m by~@e,U’+~er&y Seti- <-” ohi& -Tony WatermanFuagNigeria will ‘speak on the ~ternal_:.ael~ti~qa, F&y , _ KnigbT as ,Chai$maG. c,f the .: ag,> which.. called -for ~0 i-ii Thompi$, and’; rpbtion. topic of African Develop*ent. Of special interest will +&cep~t3lark I d, Bo’ard iaf~‘G$m$~rii~~r&~ - tuition 8 igpre.&s& .’ qptill, an c w& tpa~~ed~j~ access,~~.~~~~Qs~inp~~~e~;Wi;i;l:dti.gn~lbhn~cM~llen. be the represehtqt.ives of ,the. i and Mike Nezar@ as’;i=hqir; &~~findm~us : .;.~:E$?f;,ecle#io?ti Zimbabwe AfripahJational ;I. P&sident,x r&n,. 8 -l&e .$$iFd $f EDte‘r-: _XandI-:ihafi%% pbwe?,shpuldX_&ark McGu$e, -preSented a “Union (ZpiNUrwhd will ‘tainHidS2,,.bu~,~~~~on~ of - - ,feer@oreading not be’ giver&to, the .sn@@l&gfhy and &tailed <report address the ( issue -of the the’s’e$eople &@re pFesent .at _tl$ F&Bng,% Jatification of . sities lhemselves. ’ impaet and ifipoi;tance of the ,q,n. his term in,. office’, He \’ ‘surn~@&l offered tin apprai$al -of the ’ recent elections which were L theit p&ition$$ c~%&,il was. - -- Fr#m$n ’ 7. :tbe postponed3t$nti -Ithe _ next. Ontario Federation of .S_tu- work &complished --by the held in Rhpdesia on February coffee cake, Blbck Fofest cake, dpfebtrude, -&nts Executive-report-pub&f +ac,ious boards, and hQ wb^i;l-29. Thethree day election Fqderafcon-c&n+! n&etiq cheesecake, choc-g1ate: eclairs,, g&zatiole, lished on Febcwy gp,l980. 1 mitted recbmmendationi on in ,,&hodesia was the first / \-- .The positic& df the-Fed& cornbread: studenb flocked to the Interna-’ The .OhS h as called far a h&v these areas I Aould ‘be iqdependence election held &On th!i3SL& h’d ‘Chab rally to be held at Queen’s t&al Students Lounge last Monday ta in that country and will en’d improved. L r man of the.- Creative Arts sample a tempting .aTray. of -ho@emdde Park to demonstrate agaihsi ,- McGu&e p&sented thealmost a hundred yearsybf ’ Board are stiik -spe”, ?!* tuition iIlClX%lSeS and Cut\ a-~di~o>S’ repokt &hiCh $aS white domintition and con, x goodies pre$ared by Russigc, German, tipplications .for..%h&se PO&i- _ *backs in education. - ~ 1- r’approved hi-a vote& 19-914. c!ude a civil war which has Sppnish and French students. International - tions c:an sttll be tender&. Mark M&uire wished N&l LThe . c)FS PreSepted- t’k0 torn the,country for the last ’ ood Day, p-art- of Arts Week, wa,s designed to Until these positions are - strat&gies to combat tuition Freema&he best. of l&k;ind seven yeatis. , j in‘ students from different groups \ ‘ and he ;2ged the new council to filled,-3he Feder’atian presi- a in&eases. ’ (‘One strategy From- Mcyaster U@verrorbote languqges. -Here onk‘sttiderit shows L dent assumes thti respotis<called for -a comp$te iee Warner will work hard’ to -maintain a “sity, Prof$ssor ’ 1,er’dbvious pleasure with the-event. ibl-lity for these posts: strike for--fabuary 1, 1?81, -‘successful Federation of Stq.discuss the role of literature . . . J * . Photo b; y ASA - _<I den&, ’ I ,:.’ Oh behalf of -the- Fede&-- - and the ’ Secon‘d strategy’ < \ and education kin . African -. I -ation%f cailed& af@e hikestrike ifor ._ . :.~. -% _ _ Jo& Russell _-Devel<ppent. Professor6 Students, J. J. Ltie( i . . , r,. ,
,
/ ’’ . _ *
h
in ’
.
.g&q$&& I f\i.’ - ,;.;1_:,.
1 ‘1 ‘,-1 _,’ I’ : L.,g-_j_l ? -:t -- . .
;“,-l,. , I
rY ’ ‘I clouds of heaven.“Then the high priest rent his ’ ’ Nicodemis was -I --clo.thes, saying, he has spoken blasphemy and f the witness when he asked the%ouncil of priests they answered: “He-is guilty of, death.” c / The Editor, Dr. J. Schroe&r ‘Mr. P.’ Holmes’ discussed -(Feb. 22) the _. ’ Prof. ,*of Civil ,, En’gineering \ , _ - ’ stateme_nts of Jesus about being the ,“Son of ’ . ._ ’ I’ Man” and advanced a good-argument that this \ . \ ,term meant more than “I am a man too.” ’ s Murray’s graphic? I . _ The Bible states that Jesus ivas\both, Son of (, God and Son of man through his virgin mother . . in question .. - Mary.Mr: Holmes is correct that Jesus Falled \ _. The Editor, ’ . himself “Son, of man,” -but he. also called This is not the first time I have found the -. ’ himself ‘(‘Son of God” and attested statements -, / sketches on the Prose and Poetry page ‘of belieters in this; Let/me give a,few of the, ! inappropriate to the writing. But though I many example’s: distiounted earlier sketches as misinterpret-When J.esus asked his. disciples: ,4‘Whom do ,’ , : -men say that I the Son of man ..am?” Peter -, ations, I ‘cannot excuse‘ Mr. Murray’s latest insult. He has not only made ftpn of Wojtek \ ., answered: .“Thou art the,Christ, the Son of the Kozlinski’s meaningful piece of writing,, %but ’ living God.7 And Jesus said: .“Blessed art thou. .has. also tried to ridicule Christ’s Crucifixion. Simon. Bariona: for flesh and blood has not Mr.I$ozlinski’s -contribution was a personal revealed it, -unto thee, but my Father which isin \ I reflection on Christ’s promised “Second - htmvm.” ----_---Coming.” It was not in-Mr.-Murray’s place to . When Mary and Martha sent ?for \ Jesus . \ “compliment” ,this- ,,writing by drawing a . because their brother Lazarus was sick;Jesus I of Christ lying- on a blanket and said: “This sicknegs is not onto death,-but for ’ caricature listening to a radio, while in the.position as he the glory of God, that the Son of God might be was when he suffered and died on the cro&. glorified thereby.” ,After Lazarus had died His implied comment was in p.oor taste, and Jesus.said to Martha: “I am the resurrection, the editors should not have allowed this and the life...And whosoever .liveth and obvious insult to be printed inthe Imprint. 1 believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou I am very;disappointed that none of those this?“. And Martha answered: “Yea Lord: I r believe that thou art the Christ tbe Sonof God, ’ who screen the newspaper decided to cut out the sketch.. I hope that the choice of -sketches which shouldcome into the world.” And Jesus . will be more discreet in the future. raised-Lazaruk. ’ ’ 1 1 Diane Aubin .. -J-j Jesus said to Nicodemu&.“And Moseslifted -’ ‘8_ ’ Engiish Year II ’ -up the serpent in the wilde,rness, even so must ., the Son of man be lifted .up...For God so loved _ - - Line begihs the world, that he- gave his only begotten / Son..-.For God sent not his Son into the world to _ c’ on .fherig&t + _ -.” ,.’ ’ - ’ condemn the-world’; butthat the world through / / him might be’ saved.” The Editor, But most .important is that Je&s, was Is .there any truth to the rumour that the ’ . ‘. crucified-because he did not deny to be the Son University$,going to raffle off the IBM WV75 _ --. of God. After Jesus was arrested the high. to raise operatingfunds? . priest said to him: “I adjure thee by the .living, If it is true, where can one get tickets :and / / God, that‘ thou tell us whether thou be the when is the draw? ’ Christ; the,Son of God,” Jesus answered: “Thou ’ I’m sure -many people on campus would be .-_ ( / t has said: ‘.nevertheless I say onto you, glad to know the faots. Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting at , R. Bralit Teefer \- _ the right hand of power, and coming in -the Post deg. (Arts) -
.
.
\
-; Fri’d&y$larc$h
:<I r
,
--
,4 -
I A. \
-3 .-
&nprint
” j -.>
I
I ?.
7; &k).
_ /.-
_
i
I
1
1
1
I
.
I-
_
1 .,238&A
King&, I
Waiterloo,(~t
University) / \
.
,
:
,
My name is, Munday... Joe Munday. I’m _ found ourselves in the Campus Centre. a cop, Ontario -is my -Province. My ’ “Can I help you ?” the turnkey (as they r partner, Salmon and I ‘were $ruising , call them) asked me. along the-401 when a call came over-the “Just give us the facts, ma’am,” I radio. 1~ -r ( responded. Apparently, she had no facts There was trouble..:big trouble at the’ to give us,:/but referred us’ to- the University. of Western Ontario. Within President ,of the Federation of Students,\, minutes, we were-standing in front of a who had an offi<e upstairs. ’ man named Pappst, the Pre%ident of the , When we< got there, we had to .fight 1 student union, ‘Would you mind telling against m-&n moving furniture out to get, -us,” Salmon- asked him, ,“in ‘your own in. We encountered a man named Mark ‘McWire, who -claimed :to be nobody words, just what happened?” ? “‘It was horrible!” he replied, shudspecial. c&ring slightly. W$h a sweep; of his Eventually, we got to sp-eak- to Nils Fireman, w’h.6 had just taken.control of . ~hand,, lie; told them: “This /auditorium_ was full of students who had come to the Federation Council. “Yes,“,he told US, , hear the \Minister answer their questX-expeit Stephenson to be at Waterloo .ions;,-,instea>, they’ were ‘bored and on the seventeenth.‘? ’ c,-_frustrated.” “Do you know how daigerous that can.“This ‘Minister’,” I asked, “Could you be?” I asked. i describe her for us?” “No problem for the Federation,” he ’ Y’S&!,” Pappst responded.‘“She iv& respbnded,,‘<althougl%I think Stephenson short, Very heavy, had short <black hair, might have some trouble...” beady eyes...1 would say she was around Bac,k in the Campus Centre, Salmon fifty years old...” and I p,ond\ered our next move. “IS it S$mon and I exchanged glances, but -’ worth staying, do you think?” he asked, “I don’t know,‘,’ 3 answered. Up- a I said nofhing until we got back to the car. ’ ;Looks like Doeto-r Bette’s on the prowl stairway-to our left came an aardvark again,” he sai&disgust oozing from his ’ muttering something about deadlines, _ f voice. “We could check out the, newspaper,” I “Yup;” I’ replied. _ “Modus operandi - suggested. We both stared’ off in the i seems to be the same: she always strikes direction of the retreating animal. “But at hniversities$fleeing from answers and then again.,.” , / -killing clefenseless students\ with bore, We left. *dam. Always making -policies without During the summerof 1980, anelection consulting students and saying the most was held in whish-Bette Stephenson, , inane things. ..‘: alias Doctor Bette; ,-was clbarged (with .. Just then, a call came over the radio.’ impersonating a-Minister of Education “Car forty-two..;come &car forty-two...” ’ and Universities and Colleges.‘-In a few’ “Mu&day here,!’ I rsaid into the ike. months, the results of that election. \ ‘?Stephenson’s been spotted Ii the , I . vicinity pf the University of ,Waterloo,” ,/‘-’ ‘\ t htr,r+adio said. _-“W&e on our way,? . , I -, An’hour, later .we spoke to University , B * ,I?tisident.Burp Cashe,ws,-but he claimed i T’ not to know anything,,On a hunch, we , , f f.-< ’ \ . \ r. L . .. . , /
News , Armed
eastern Europe that the West had abandoned them. Van Kessenich advanced a concept which states that the power of a countryis a product of its ideology and its means In their (military strength). drive for world domination the Soviets are cotinuing the political war which attacks the ideology of the West, thus rendering the military strength harmless. This strategy has the advantage that it is a war waged by the patient and is especially effective against the impatient, as is the case with the population of the Western countries. The Consul stated his admiration for Am&ican president Carter, who according to himis the first Western leader to understand how to fight a political war with the Russians. Moves such as former ambassador to the United Nations
Andrew Young’s mission ‘to Africa and the stated intention to remove troops from Korea have gained the US political support from the third world, and as sukh are really aggressive acts against the Soviets. Looking to domestic affairs van Kessenich said that we should dismantle the-excesses of the welfare state which he claimed robs us of our individuality and our responsibility for ourselves, characteristics which he maintained are the basis of our society. His Roman Catholic bias came through when he began to denounce the-Birth Control pill and abortions as the most serious excesses of the Welfare State. Heended the talk with a call for a more moral societylwhich would be able to combat the atheistic ideology of Marx. Frank Morison
Campus groups move 6n fee hike -strike -
The Arts ,,Student Union (ASU) held its annual general ~ meeting Tuesday afternoon. The number of people att ending the meeting, held in the Arts building student lounge, was very small but quorum was mustered and maintained during the session, unchallanged. After the preliminary reports and discussion were dispensed with, a motion was introduced authorizing the Union executive to send letters protesting the tuition increase by the provincial government to officials of the Ministry of Colleges and Univer&ties wd other members of the government. The motion was easily passed. The main business of the meeting was a callfor a boycott of classes in the Arts faculty on March 17, the day Dr. Bette Stephenson, Minister of Colleges and Universities, is com‘ing to the UW campus to speak on education policy. It was hoped that students joining the boycott would picket the Arts buildings and turn out for a demonstration when Stephenson is scheduled to speak. The motion ‘was amended to read that the boycott would start at 12:30 in the afternoon instead
Photos illustrate Indian life and death
W-PlRG
graphic
March
7,198O.
Imprint
5 -
conflict/detente I
A novel view of detente was expounded by the’ Dutch Consul-General at a talk he gave last Tuesday, Dr. Eduard Michiels van Kessenich spoke on “The Dangers of Detente” at a seminar sponsored by the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages. The danger according to van Kessenich is that we do not understand the Soviet policy of peace. He believed that, for the Soviets, a policy of peace means a policy of not-real war - that is, armed conflict. For the Soviets, detenteis a toolfor advancing the conflict on the psychological battlefield. t For instance, he cited the case when the Soviets were amazed at the euphoriain the West on the signing of the Helsinki accords, for they saw it 8s a consolidation’of all their gains since WW2. They could now say to their satellites in
.)
Friday,
.
presented the photoworks of Hiro Miya-
matsu, a renowned Japanese photo-journalist who for the past IO years has worked with aboriginal peoples around the world. The presentation was in the CC Great Hall. For over four years Miyamatsu has been working with the peoples of the Grassy Narrows reserve south of Dryden. His photos are beautiful and powerful statements of both the pride of the Indian people and the tragedy which invades their lives. Photo at right, courtesy of Mr. Miyamatsu.
of lasting all day. The amended motion was passed after a great deal more discussion. c The meeting adjourned after passing ahalmotion callingfor the ASU to support the tuition fee hike strike planned for next September by the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS) and to urge other faculty societies and the UW Federation of Students to back the strike. In a separate move, UW student Cl&s Reid took the first steps towards forming a iroup to take action on the fee hike strike in Village II. At a small inaugur meeting Wednesday night, Reid outlined thethreemainpoints ofthe Federation petition circulatedin February: an accessibility study, OSAP improvements, and an end to fee autonomy. UW’s case was -brought up concerning the Senate‘ vote against fee autonomy, which was later overruled by the Board of Governors. UW President Burt Matthews later votedinfavour ofautonomyat a Council of Ontario Universities -(COU) meeting. UWfees were
already .5% higher than the provincial standard before the 7.5% increase. The stand of the provincia government, that theincreaseis merely “keeping up with inflation” drew heavy fire. It ‘was pointed out that neither students’ nor parents’ wages were able to keep up with inflation. On more than one occasion, students expressed fear of Administr,ation reprisalis for witholdingfees. However, Reid believed that there was nofhing Matthews could do if enough people lent their support. “We shouldn’t be afraid to refuse to pay,” he commented.
Mediation services provides refereeing A new group believes that you
in the community don’t have to go to
court to settle your disputes.
Community
Medition Services, an organization cosponsored by the Ministry of- Corrections and ‘the Mennonite Central have been operating ofCohmittee, ficially since November and have already mediated several cases successfully. !‘We want to see conflicts settledin the community rather than be divorced from everyday life,” said the service’s Cathle$n Cleland. The group deals with landlord-tenant problems, roommate disagreements and many other kinds of interpersonal conflicts, and its aim is to have the ,two parties solve their own problems in order to eliminate the “guilty or innocent-win or lose situtation” of the courtroom. The service has been in the organizational stage for nearly 2 years, and is staffed by Cleland, a part-time student in psychology and peace-conflict studies at Conrad Grebel College, and by Dean Peachey, a graduate student in social psychology. People seeking mediation must sign a contract, though not a legally binding one, and work toward a solution that is mutually agreeable. The staff will provide -guidance and “prevent the process from deteribrating into a shouting match,” said Cleland. Those interefsted in the mediation procedure can call 742-0922 OF go to the service’s office at 50 Kent Avenue, Kitchener.
Pledge a Hummer for, the Push/Pull Saturday,
March
14 marks
move. “If we have a fee hike strike, we don’t want to have the students hurt,” he noted. Simonis pointed out that the reason Stephenson is coming to UW is “because 4000 students at Waterloo Several complaints were ’ signed the petition.” He feels noted on the Federation’s and that the rally will show to all OFS’ timipg oft he move, being of UW what has already so late in the term. Many also taken place at Carleton, Westfelt that interest would wane ern and U of T; that Stephenover the course ofthesummer. son is constantly making This &as not so, arguednew conflicting statements. Federation Vice President‘ It is the intention of the Wim Simonis. He gave notice that the Federation was preparing an information c&m. paign and that the essential thing was to make sure that students were fully aware of the reasoning behind all the
. ’ the 4th
annual UW Engineers’ Bus Push for Big Sisters. The Engineers will be pushing and pulling a Kitchener Transit bus all the way from the UW, campus on University Ave., down King St., to Market Square. Pledges are being taken on a per kilometer basis, the push being a total of 6.5 kilometers long (that’s over 4 miles). They’ll be taking donations along the route, too. The parade forms up near the main entkance to UW in the Engineering 1 culde-sac at lo:15 am. Celebrities helping out with the push/pull are Mayor Marjorie Carroll of Waterloo; Alderman Dor&nic Cardillo. of Kitchener, Rev. Walter McLean (MP-Waterloo), a team from CHYM radio and Bob Bratina from CKKW radio. They, along with dozens of Big Sisters and Little Sisters and 100 or so Engineering students will be pushing and pulling the bus up and down the many hills alotig the route. Along the route, the pushers ,and pullers will be accompanied by the Plummer’s Hard Hat Band, and by the Engineering Society’s mascot, the Ridgid Tool, a 5-foot chrome plated wrench. The procession will continue non-stop to Market Square with the exception of a short pit-stop at McDonald’s. Upon arrival at their destination, the/Engineers and Company will proceed to a reception at the YMCA on Frederick St. Pop, pizza, coffee and doughhuts will be supplied courtesy of the respective businesses. The Engineering Society has supported the K-W Big Sisters for four years, starting with the 1976 Bus Push. Since then, there has also been a Big Sisters Card-a,-Rama and by selling individual toothpicks during 1979’s Orientation. The Engineers ask you to give them a call at 885-1211 extension 2323 if you are interested in pledging or pulling. Look also for the “Pledge a Plummer” stickers on participating Engineers around campus.
Federation, he added, to make all the available information known and to keep the channels open during the summer. There are also plans for going to high schools to educate potential first-year students on the issue. “By doing that, we can have avery successful fee hike strike.” It is-clear that, while there are at least eight other universities in Ontario exam.ining the possibility of such a strike, none are moving as
quickly, or with an organiz- . ation like that at UW. Simonis , noted that Waterloo “is trying to supply the lead- for the other universities in Ontario.” A larger meeting has been scheduled for 10:00 pm, Sun-, day, March 9 in the Village II Great Hall. Village dons will ’ be encouraged to call floor meetings at 9%) to lead their floors to the main meeting. All interested students outside Village II are also invited. Mark D’Gabriel ,
Role of ,urban planning unclear but controversial
“What should the role of urban planning be within the current Canadian political economic framework?” was the question posed at this year’s Planning conference held on Saturday, March 1 at Conrad Grebel. In fitting with the diverse nature of the planning profession, participants of the conference included economists William Curry and Roweis, social Shoukry planners -Ernie Ginsler and William Thomson, developer Greg Voisin and. politicians Robert N’eedham, Barbara Greene and David Smith. While no answer was arrived at, several provocative ideas were put forth during the course of the conference. The highlight of the day was a panel discussion dealing with the problems facing in our present planners -atmosphere of a tight ecoconservative nomy and politics. Inflation implies government cutbacks and those
areas the worst hit are social and economic planning says planner Ernie Ginsler. Recognizing this close link between the planning and the political prodeputy mayor of cesses, North York Barbara Greene advocates that the “planner must become more of a politician.” - It is only through dealing closely with the various levels of government, enacting trade-offs and compromise that the planning process can succeed in a nation unwilling to invest in anything but the short term. In somewhat-the same vein, developer Greg Voisin stressed that, from the developer’s point of view, planningguidelines are often outdated and not in keeping with the values of the day.. The one di,sappointment of the day was the absence of ’ keynote speaker Lloyd Axworthy. 1~ his place was David Smith, lawyer and MP for the Toronto riding of Broadview. His address was ’ received with enthusiasm,
\
but those present felt that the speech was too much of a rehash of the problem, shedding little new light on the subject. The ideas which showed some of the most insight came from Dr. Shoukry Roweis of the University of Toronto. Our present governing system is, he purports, one of indirect politics maintained through Royal Commissions, economic policy, numerous committees, etc. In this system, the planner is finding his new role is one of mediator between the public and the government. ‘As a mediator, Roweis warns that the planner must not become a mere filter of political information but must rely on a creative imagination to help direct political action. In these days of uncertainty about the future it was felt that this was indeed a relevant question to be debated and perhaps one that might be posed to a great many other faculties on campus. Laurie
Duquette
I
’
,
’
.
1\ For L Sale -
‘63
_i
‘-
excellent
Oldsmobile,
parts (could work.)
I
car. $90.00 as is. be certified with some
. . Help
support
Greenpeace -
Tshirts etc on sale in K-W Probe Gffice, ES.1 Rm 21‘4. Proceeds -towards Greenpeace, Vancouver. ~
>
Haadst+p
- P&ers,
. ~There’smore td -usthin meek the ear Sale.’
I
--
pipes,
vials, scales, bongs, qhillum;, clips, books, bags, stashes. screens, ,cleaners stones, cards,. coke items -etc. .2nc Time Around;~~2~K%gStreet North, Waterloo, Ont. TuesSat 11-5.884-6601. Altec Lansing
lyodelg
Series
tl loudspeakers. ‘Oak cabinets, I 1 month old. List over $1000, asking $550. @I 884;6377, --
-2nd
time Around
- Uniq-ue old
stuff, junk, ‘ clothing, headshop, furnjture. sell ‘and:trade small \ -,,. mg things. Tues-Sat f- ’ _- - King St N; Waterloo ~WateRloo. Theatre) . 884-660114
crafts, We buy intefest11-5, l’2 (beside upstairs.
. !‘
Speakers,
, _
8 ‘a- W DM4
morg to us than meets the ea3!- rapport, weYre offering you up to % “More“ because we don’t just sell off the Manufacturer:s Suggeste a35List.
only
‘1 “five monthsold, perfectcondition. One pair for $4OC. C$II - 1 Steve 885-1973. -_ * J
r
.
Reports,
’
essays,
theses;
etc.
IBM typewriter, 1’0 years expgrience, felephone 745_ 831 3 evenings. 1 _Expert
typing,
t?ry
e
papers;
essays, resumes. ,English: .German, French. Promptser_ ‘vice. Reasonable rates. 744/ *_ > +,9393. E xperiehed
typist
/ .
typist,
To sublet:
Wmm&ina - - --------a
essays,
Aw&able’ From April
q. ‘Peace of Mind’ If .you discover that the’same audio equipment can be purchased for less-(anywhere in ‘Canada), we won’t disannoint vou. We’ll beat
1%-d
resumes, theses, etc. No math papers. Reasonable ’ rates. Westmount area. Call 7433342.
Housing
I
- - 1 ‘ii
Enjoy ‘“worry-free” performante with our exclusive extended warranties: a 3 years for turntables & tape decks _
We’ll @ve you 10 fulldays to thoroughly enjoy your new audio equipment. If it doesn’t, quite meet,your personal needs, we’ll allow vou -full
/
Advanced -- ______
--
Audio ------
.
is featqring we&k upop week of W. name-brand +udio specials! _ _ Look for 6ur ads each week. and discover why.., 1 “there’s more to Us than meets the ear”. i _ . -.-- /
I’-
y-
J
-
irv
_
*-
Pioneer, Mar-ant& Mission,’ _ . Technics, and Dual, you won’t want or need anything else! They’ve got what it takes and they give \_ everything they’ve got! r ,’
‘
AND that covers parts “and” 1.
Policy a- - - - - - - , -. ... .3 -- Go, -, . If you have exist :ing equip- straight. Once yotive made ment, bring it in. WC2’11give you ,your audio purchase: we’11 stay-with YOU to show YOU a reasonable tracle-in price how to operate and maintain which will then 1be applied towards your new audio equip- your new equipment, We’ll ment purchase. It sure saves even help you set it upat home! , you from worrying about it! / _~
.
I5-Sept
. 2, 1,
1980. In Waterloo near Westmount.:Furnished, garr ’ age, large living room and dining room, patio, washer and dryer, close’ te 2 bus routes; shopping, university. Phone 5769664. -
.
Need a nitie place to live for toe
,
summer? Why not enquire’ abut 523A sunnydale Place? . $367/month - sublet for the -- summer. Option to take’over lease in Sept. Onlypayfoigas. Sundeck and skylight, nice feiitures for fun in the summer. Phone 885-3893 for full details. Must be seen. 5-
..
Two students
to share
manutactu&rs
,
-Apartmerit,
Pioneer. Mikon. Dual. ’ 1
to sublet,
b.
’
’ You’ll also find a gotid selectioti of automobile stereo , systems by Pioneer, Marantz, Jensen, Deveau, and Canton. _-
-Drop iir I t&y!
May \to
J4ugtist.
One bedroom,’ large, - clean, all utilities included. Laundry facilities provided, free parking, 20 minute walk or .lOe‘minutes by bike to campus. $208 per month lminus s5,if rentpaidon time). 422 Barrie Place, Apt. 7. Phone 884-9866 after 6:bo.
i- + -s
‘Skiing M&t
’
,.
3 Charles St.. West at Queen EGitrhanor
1 I,L,b..rlu,
Lc.1,
742-6951 he. Anne,.Goo-dsnow,
chalets and condos, (418)826-2643;’ . continued
induaing:
mod-
- ern, furnished home, near university. Includes two bath_ rooms, three bedrooms, stuidy, garage. $125 each plus utilities. Phone 886-668.4 between 7am-loam and 5pm12pm, _ .a
I
Weekly. ’ 0~ pag& 8
Dav Refund’
4 ‘Brand Naties BUY&$ ~oay~~~~~ speakers
with IBM-‘
:typewriter will type essays, theses, resumes, etc. Prompt, ~ ,accurate service and reasonable rates. Call 743-2933 evenings. . - ‘Experienced’
-
nrs4zarir\ VI
ILCII,”
or 742-65t 31
- 33 Main St. (Galtj Cambridge, Ontario 653-2835_ -
, m Open daily. 10-6 Thurs. & Fri. IO=9 Cam bridge store -mgq closed on Monday. LJ -. . ___ _ _ , Ask about Wesseling-s‘ Extended Warranties
&p,&(FFR.e ’
Technics JVE
q
-am
-
’ Laarnrn’1-‘
-.
.snaa
y
’
Friday,
-
- Village
Matthews
to delicense
Ever since the Great Hall was licensed five years ago, students in Village I have found that it is not in their best interests to have aliquor, license for their party room. In the past, several attempts - as far back as May 1976 have been made to delicense the room, but the appeals were always denied and the matter was never pursued to its final end. This year’s Village I Council decided to take concrete action before the end-of the term, when the issue might be shelved and delayed again. The main reason for delicensing the Great Hall is the fact that, at the moment, Bar Services (a service affiliated to the University) must be hired for any party in the hall: This major expense discourages party organizers, and prevents smaller parties - house parties for example - from occuring. The delicensing would mean that liquor could not be sold, but would not prevent the consumption of liquor on the premises. As the Don for E4, Mark Winnett, says, “the Great Hall would become
part of our habitation,” and liquor could be bought be: forehand with contributions from the party-goers (at half the price) and be distributed at the party. Village I does have any other party room, which is not under license. But the Blue Dining Hall is in constant demand for social purposes and cannot accommodate all the students’ needs. Besides, as Marilyn Reynolds, President of the Village I Council, points out, “The Great Hall has more convenient. facilities, and a better atmosphere” for residence parties: it has a hard floor for dancing, more comfortable furniture, wash; room facilaites nearby, and its smaller size is more appropriate for university parties. Another point which obviously. upsets Village I ‘residents isthat theVillage residence has fewer residents, but has four good size unlicensed party rooms. , The Council feels that it is time ‘to put an end to the debate because the students are being deprived of the room’s full potential. Winnett hopes that “the Village will be in firm control of the Great Hall so we can use.it for our own needs.” This year’s Village I Council is also the first to approach the president directly. Vice-President Jim
Griffiths and speaker Bob Tibbo, spoke to Matthews two weeks ago, and explained their reasons for wishing to delicense the Great Hall. Though the president “seems to be concerned with running things smoothly”, says Tibbo, both council members were surprised at his concern for the convocations which are held bi-annually *at the Great Hall. They pointed’ out that ‘special occasion’ permits coukd be issued (maximum cost $50) to allow him to continue holding the convocations in the hall. But the president’s reaction to their arguments did not seem hopeful to Tibbo as he “got the impression that he (Matthews) was swayed negatively, though he -asn’t going to say anything either way.” So the decision to send the letters was made “for impact, and to show good visible proof that there are a large number of people who are behind us.” If Matthews does not respond favourably, Reynolds, who has been the motivating force behind the renewed protest, warms that the Council “has other tactics”, such as petitions and-mass phone calls, which they will “not hesitate,to use”. But she hopes that their letter campaign will finally end the Great Hall debate. Diane Aubin
’ Theatre
(in Modern
J
position zind question on the real issues.
of the Arts
Languages
Building)
Monday, M&h l&l980 1:15-22:30h?t A Sfudents’ Council meeting will at evening at 7:00 PM to eTzb& issues. ’ umanitie&Conference
Room
334’
-Federation of Students \ \
-
.
U of T Tuition Increase Passes TORONTO - After nearly three hours of heated discussion a sub-committee of the University of Toronto governing council approved increases in student fees by an average of 16.5% by a vote of 15 to 13. The meeting, which followed a two day occupation of university president Ham’s office in protest of the proposed increase, attracted an audience of 120 students and-was conducted in a very tense atmosphere. - Vice president and provost Donald Chant defended the increase saying that “the extra funds will be extremely important for keeping up administrative staff, replacing obsolete equipment and continuing acquisition of books and periodicals. Harry Eastman, vice-president and registrar, agreed with Chant and added that students already suffer from an erosion in staff and resources, “Students should keep a sense of proportion” in considering the fee increase, Eastman said. “At a time when inflation is 10 per cent it is not a seventeen and a half per cent increase. It is more like a seven and a half per cent increase...the amounts (of increase) in real terms are not very significant.” This immediately drew loud hissing and foot stomping from the students lining the meeting room. David Jones, students administrative council president, spoke against the motion. The fee increase, he said, will restrict admission to the affluent rather than the academically able student. “Uniuersal access to the university is seriously undermined and tuition is certainly a barrier to some students.” In a final statement which drew applause, he said: “Although some wealthy are intelligent not all the intelligent are wealthy. *’
Women Vs. Engineering Papers
. Also: OFS Chairperson, and Federation Pksident. Neil Freeman
Here the Government’s r Bette Stephenson
Imprint
7 -
CUP’Briefs.~
Hall
Federation of Students
I
7,198O.
r
-
I wants’ Great
UW President Burt Matthews’ desk threatens to be buried by an estimated 600 letters,’ pouring in from disgrunted Village I residents. The letters are a demonstration of the students’ support for the delicensingof the Great Hall. I
urged
March
8
,-
WINDSOR & VANCOUVER-The University of Windsor has set up a special committee to investigate the engineering student society’s newspaper because of complaints about its context, considered by many as tasteless and sexist. University president Mervyn Franklyn established the seven member committee, drawn from among faculty, staff and students, after Wendy Murdoch, speaking for concerned students, voiced her displeasure about the content of the paper, which is called the Essex. The Essex is also in trouble for. publishing a story that resulted in a woman engineering student filing a libel suit against the publisher, editor and writer. Since the committee was formed, the paper has toned down its content and is setting out an editorial policy. In British Columbia the Engineering Undergraduate Society at the University of British Columbia/in Vancouver faces an investigation by the B.C. Human Rights Branch on a charge of sex discrimination. Five Vancouver women’s groups, among them the Business and Professional/ Womens’ Club and the Canadian Advisory Council on the Status of Women,- have filed k complaint with the government agency alleging “the continuing pornographic and sexist publications. and activities of the Engineering Undergraduate Society discourag,e .women from entering the engineering department of the faculty of applied science and create a discriminatory climate withing the university.” The complaint is based on section 3 of B.C.‘s human rights code which prohibits discrimination in any service (including education) which is customarily available to the public:
Liberals Not Big Research Spenders VANCOUVER - The new Liberal government is not likely to increase scientific research funding, British Columbia university administrators predicted Februarv 25.
“There’s no evidence of a change of heart from the Liberals,” said J.M. Dewey, dean of graduate studies at the University of Victoria. “If their past record is anything to go by we’ll have a long wait for an increase.” Dewey said he found a “general uncertainty” at a recent meeting of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council in Ottawa, the body that allocates federa_ government research funds. “Nobody/at the NSERC was willing to hazard a guess as to what the new government would do,” Dewey said. “We’re still behind other developed countries in research,” said University of British Columbia research adminis: trator Richard Spratley. Spratley said Canada needs more industrial research and development and said he hopes Canada will eventually spend the 2.5 percent of the Gross National Product on research that the defeated Conservatives set as a target for the eighties, nearly double Canada’s average of 1.3 percent yearly in the past ten years.
MkGill Drops South / African Investments MONTREAL - In response to a request from the McGill South Africa Committee (SAC), the board of governors of the university has set up a standing committee,on social responsibility in investments which will consider the feasibility of divestment of any financial interest the university has in companies dealing with South Africa. The SAC has collected more than 3,006 signatures on a petition calling for divestment. At a meeting of the board Feb 25, studGents’ society president John MacBain read a statement by SAC asking the standing committee to report to the board at their next meeting in March. -MacBain believes the board of governors committee is interested in the issue and will begin their discussions as soon as possible. Chief judge Alan Gold, chairperson of the board of governors, said the committee “intends to deal -with the issue at the earliest possible opportunity but that doesn’t mean tomorrow.” i
Simon Fraser Students Face Rent Increases
BURNABY - The Simon Fraser University Board of Governors, have approved a 49 percent rent increase over two years for student residences. The board reversed itself in a Feb 26 vote after deciding last fall not to increase the rent, citing then an external which said the committee’s report residences were in a shocking state of affairs. The board also stated at the time that students should not be burdened with massive rent increases, especially when maintenance had been cut back severely, due to lack of funds. The current board policy concerning the financing of the residences is that they should pay their own way and that the costs should,equal the revenue from . rent. David Pap& coordinator of housing and residences, said that the rent increases would go directly into main; tenance and administrative costs and that more money would be needed for the repairs.
OPIRG Loses At McMaster HAMILTON - The future of the Ontario. Public Interest Research Group (OPPRG) has been thrown into doubt after McMaster University students voted to discontinue automatic fee collection for the campus OPIRG branch. The results of a referendum February 13 and 14 showed 900 students’ in favour of stopping the fee collection and 719 against. The campaign . to a stop C)PIRG fee collection was launched and run by the McMaster Engineering Society. OPIRG director Peter Hutton charges that the engineers are attempting to smash the organization. “The engineers claimed OPIRG was anti-democratic and antinuclear. If they were only opposed to automatic fee collection, why did they mention these two issues which-onlv serve as attacks on our organization?” he said
.
Person51 _
’ -.
-I
Nutrition* ,Counselling - able. Phone 744-8817 time..
aGa;any-,._
at 1:30 and 4:3O pm. R,eturn Sunday 9700 pm. Fee-paying Feds only- s.3.0Oeach way. Tickets onsale Thursday 9:00-’ 1.
Tanted \ . - _I M&haek Do not-doubt$haQt is Sax player to play in dance‘) you to who,m ! refer. l give no band. 886-2871. Dan. ’ 3 account of myself to’mortal ir Old X Motorcycle negative_s, man ‘and tq me it matters books, pictures; stamps, any nothing -whether you regard related material pre , 1960. *-or scorn my warning. Destiny is ’ less. inexorablethan it-, Also buy old European-motorcycles, non-British. / %84appears. Quha.ve.before you 6601. , _ ’ the fairest and purest crea’ ture that ever crossed your .Fun_ky clothing,. jeans; uq-. pat& and an option. HonourI usual crafts, small collect‘able and generous love.may ‘ables,.any wierd items. MO+ even 2 now ‘<work out your ing? We’ll buythe stuff you’d - -happiness, and effect your probably throw out. We want escape; a frantic- and selfish Jhead .t paraphernalia (magaI ~ passion will but lead you-to zines, books, hand-made -it. misery and doom. I‘have said ems, unique papers et&) 2nd ,all that it pieases me to utter. + Time Around, 12 Kingi St,- N, y Since I can defypersecution, 88416601.1 -_ - i oardon me if ‘I do not yield to , curiousity. Zanoni. - -’ New I .Lost’. ’ . -, SaturdaywMarch \ 8, lnternational Women’s Day. K-W’s i One@? close-linked b&elet on Wed. F& 6th between new feminist magazine, HP-teria debutq.-Buy it at local _ Arts Library and South Campus Hall: Gr‘eat, s&mental newstands, Short Shop Or / ’ Marts, or -bumont value.” -Reward. offered. If- 1Kwikie _- -found please.Ycontact Carol ,, Press Graphixt g7 Victoria St North,, Kitchener. Subscribe -885-5525. _. --,, ,to ,Box 2481, Statibn B, - FocundJ .‘\ ’ -Kitchener. L ’ J 1 Outside Imprint Qff@e, Geo- .* 4‘ , Help Want&d -’ graphy- books. Contact Im_ / ‘print. bhmont Press’ Graphixi -a 7 5% I Kitc&&er’ worker-owned ,A Ui7iverhit y jacket. &me and shop,seeks three , _ fac%Ity listed, ’ Enquire at typesetting J . people ,with sk.ill or captitude Imprint. for typesetting, sales, book. Ride Available keeping a rid/or process cam4 ‘&deration of Students Ex- m-3. Phone 576.&40. , \ ;.’
--
I
-
/
lNTERSESSl6N
li;j$~o~
. . .
,H‘OtiEtiADE S-6lJp I ~ AND COFFEE I with purchase of any sandwich
p.m.,
_I
%ntriincCm.~
of tJuiwia
ddo
-,I-O 5 -1 I
z$id
vegetadles .......... - _
1 99 199.-
vegetables ................4- 1 - -
1980
’
-._
_
- ’
’ SUMMER
i
0 ANTR 0 COMM - - -
a,ECON. -i
q
2040 1600
- Peoples -,,Busine$s
. 2020
-
, . ,>
-\.
- _
-ENGL
3290 \ -
Cl ENGL
3350
. 0 GEOG
I
You must be 19 or’over td enter the Pickle Cellar
l
L
SESSJON ’
1980
)‘xi
.
8,
\
@ncJ~~;
,
13. Cla&s are held for two hours each day;. you like to further your-university during the spring-and summer? Mbnday through Friday. ._ Then ,consider the 1ntersessjo.n and_Sum,mer r _. Students -enrolling in ‘the‘ Int&session a;dLor Summe; Session program may take a Session , programs offeredat I\!lpissing maximum”of two courses in one session or a University College in North Bay?: If you are currently attending univer-ma&mum of three cour& during both. sessions. ’ sit-y, you may, take courses at Nipissing and :’ Of inter&t ‘to i980 graduates in ’ have them credited. to,wards :your .degree. / ‘-> -Simply obtain a Letter of Permisiion from Education -is the opportunity to obtain -an additional basic divisional qualification with‘ ..your institution to take these courses,. of Education. Additional basicEstablished ‘in 1974, - I,n’tersession and ’ I th.e Ministry Summer ‘Session are designed as enrichment - - qualification courses for the Primary Division ;acld- for’ the Intermediate Division run Iprograms, providing-students with new and -unusual courses. -As part of this enrtchment _. from April 28%to May 31. -The courses willprogram’ the unive.rsity brings in faculty who be givenby a team from Nipissing’s Faculty of Education.Courses are five hours per day , are special.ists in their fields. Two-thirds of the Intersession and, Summer Session courses and include a two-week practicum. I . The northern ’ settmg of Nipissing will be taught by--distinguished ‘faculty from, : other major Canadian univezs$ies: . University’Coilege makes. this campus an _ Intersessioncourses- are offered for a f -i-deal place to spendyour spring and summer. 10 week period,from-April 21 to June 27. I_ The beautiful720 acre campus is a natural - Classes are held two evenings each week, -recreation centre with nature trails, a_ small --either o,n -Monday and Wednesday -evenings ‘; lake , and-townhouse residences. , - ’ For more information -fill out this - or on Tuesday and-Thursday evenings. coupon and return it to the address shown. ’ Summer Session courses are .offered‘ for a 6 week$erjod from July 2 to, August ’ . Would education
“3490
. 0 MATH
of the World Organiza-
Education - -Law&d
3765
sSocial
Welfare-
‘<
>
1980
* A/; &) Pick/e&Tjmy cati eat. . : -4
EDUCATJON-GRADVAT+ --L 0 EDUC
-’ Education
‘4565
‘e EDUC ‘\
-.
4525. --
All co&es
to
-
2 Education Intermediate
i .-
0 ENG L’ FILM
6 HIST’ .OHlST
I
a’nd Roman
Fantasy - The Director’s
2840
’
-
-.Military - Military
1
Issues
_ c] SCCl’ ( -
2090
-
I ’ ’ II - ’
History History
2520 .--- ,Contemporary 2540 i 2000
-
Cinema
.2311 ,232l
0 PHIL: a PSYC 1
.I
Moral ,
- Moral Philosophy 2 Developmental .Psych,ology
.
_- Sociology Education
~
of
c ’ ’ .- ’ 0 -Residence Information 1 a ‘7 - \ ,“,_. j> x. - ‘NAME \. :::. .‘; .- . . . : . .: . . ..:; . . . ’ \ <Sm. I - *ADDRESS . . . . . . . . . ; . . . ._ . . . . .,,. \ I ./.......I..................... . . I’... . . -.-. ., . .-. -. . . . . . -- UNIVERSITY I _ \
_- Mail‘to:
in the Division
--_
-Information
y
budgetory -
-
University
. (705)
approiql
and sufficient
enrolment. -
.
--
- .
‘.
I
;(Just-N bidgqaort
\. . . .
. :
, _’ in
474-3450
-
Photogripher
-.
-
6oUege;
‘Box 5002, Gortianville Road,. North Bay, Ontario PIB 8.&7
/
are subject-to
Office,
-~ Nipissing
in the -’ Division-,
,
offered
- Greek
Civilization ’ I ‘, 2 110 1 Science Fic$on’,and _
18 PHIL \.-
1
I ’
I Primary’ _-
. to
1000
-
in Basic
Mathematics T Introduction
Psychology3400-Psychologyof
0 SWLF
%
0
Northern’,Develop’ . ment
_ i-9110 y Topics
-k 7 OPSYC,
=
and Regional
-%lajor American Authors --
, , 1100 ,
\c3 CLAS i .* ’
\*
Economics ’ - An* Introduction’, 1. C&adian -Literature/*
-
’ ,
tion and Management’ Introduction to Urban
,_ ( - 0 PSYC
I
&f ’ Rd)
Friday,
March
7,198O.
Jmprint
/ ’
_
.
_
?.
9 -_ -
-I
A&on Kuerti, -one of the,f&eho& .&nist&f btir th& ; * 1I-- _I -J_ .: -‘\ - perforked Sunida; in the-Theatre of the Arts. It ‘was his first ;appearance . u&h -a chamber orchestra in thi+ area. Althoukh not a child prodigy, he began to give con&rts a_t’the ag6 of 11. On Sunday-‘sco,ncert ,- be play,ed Dvorak’s Piano Quiti& in A - - . * and _ fia,no and ,Winds in E blat Major, . i Mozart’s Piano Quint&t,, I‘ for I h ,
.
I _A’ --T. . \.
. _\ Anton Ku& arrived casually and- late ‘for L r each person should,be doing because of . his rehearsal with the Stratford Ensemble. > / Kuerti’s precise and commanding, , Without fanfare and almost incidentally ,he , __ . \-Kueiti &-&;..;. . --I 1 x-v. / ‘\ 1 . j efficiency. I strolled onto the small-round stage of the _ Kuerti emigrated to the United States from Theatre of- the Arts and politely greeted ~_ \ 9 Vienna when he was about four years old. - , _. several members of the- Ensemble who cz -’ Since that time he has travelled the world were limbering up their fingers and many times over on concert tours. He has instruments. He seemd td be completely at : --I been touring most extensively in Europe ease and rela3d among his fellow I ^ h 1 ,_ _ - and -with major orchestras -, musicians and-although he is a rather 1. \ 7 ~ _ in theStates ’ but has-also played -with every major reserved man he displayed no attitude of . orchestra in Canada. He is now beginning / , condescension or superi$rity. an extensive two-month tour of the far Kuerti is not a flamboyant man. He does east. This tour will include concerts in not draw attention to himself in his actions India, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan; or his temperament. Although he is a 3 While on -this tour Kuerti must get pianist of international stature,and fam> he -accustomed to unfamiliar -pianos. “I don? does not play the role-of a celebrity. take this piano out of the country - or at‘ Dressed sloppily in thick blue cords and a least not out of North America. It is too largely checked flannel shirt,_ he ._ folded . .’ his * - much of a bother transnorting it L beige coat over a chair ano ran his hands everywhere.” through his thin unkempt hair, :which, was/ This is a piano bench-review. To explain Having seen the music that Kuerti Kuerti said that “Such an extensive tour is brushed back from his forehead, and’ sat played, I can appreciate his great t&k - lthis well, I wauld have to go into a long , unusual for me. It is unusual to travel that ’ down almost immediately at his p-iano. and complicat&l story which would take all the more.. Watching pianists from the long but I don’t often get into Asia. I’d like forever to r’ecite. It is enough to say that safety pf~a seat in the audience, 1.have * Kuerti is a very economical man. FIe . . to see it a bit. I can’t get there every always been inclined to underestimate through a series of coincidences and . I spends few words, speaking laconically _ year.” He describes his life as “quite good luck as well as knowing the right talent.. It look0 easy. Of course it and to the point without being‘brusqu,e,or settled, really.” Although he makes many . people and being in the right place at the does. It issupposed to look’easy. unfriendly; he wastes little time. but gets forays into various localities, they are FoHowing the-notes on the page-and right time ,I_did not attend the concert ’ down to the work at hand quickly and , _ usually brief and scattered rather than I that Anton Kuerti gave with the Stratford comparing them to what I heard was with the efficiency oT-a businessman. gruelling tours. He bases himself in very revealing. Kuerti seldom puts marks Ensemble in the Theatre\ of the Arts on Similarly,.he devotes little time to his i Toronto where he is the resident pianist at Sunday night. Ididn’t attend the concert; -on ,his page to guide him in his ’ + ’ personal appearance in private life, yet the University of Toronto. He was IJ was in it. interpretation. What he plays is an .retains a dignity which demands the attracted to Toronto because he had interpretation of his mind, not his pen. I I Kuerti needed someone to turn the respect of his colleagues. Perhaps his one previously done many concerts in the. city I pages of his music for him so I Twas astonished,by the lightne- and indulgence ‘or extravagance isthe use of i I and was familiar with it. He was also agility of his playing especially during the hisdwn piano for the concerts he gives, a_ volunteered, thinking that he needed me looking for a teaching appointment. Kuerti racing passages of the Scherzo in, only for the rehearsal whjch would be his luxury not affordable by most pianists. does teach now although he-says, “I find I - Dvorak% “Piano Quintet in A”. Had I - last run-through of his music before Kuerti, however, is an exception. He does teach increasingly less. I think that -doing the concer&But his rehearsal was been playing this piece, it would have ’ not belong to the ranks of “most~pianists.” performing myself is much more been pedantic,. heavy ,and dull. ’ ’ my ‘screen-test’ as he put it. I passed so He is widely accepted to. be one of the ,. interesting for me than showing someone I spent the entire time (when I should * The first-piece Kuerti played was foremost ‘pianists of-the time and uses-his . else how to do,it\” , _ have been taking notes) nervously own piano because he is familiar with it Mozart’s “Quintet for Piano and Winds, . \. :’ He has been pleased with the talented and this ensures a performance of higher standing up every -minute and turning his ‘in E Flat\ Major” which Mozart himself .’ _.’+ I *students he has taught but felt that it was. pages hoping that,1 wouldn’t goof. _ described as “the best work I have ever quality. ’ beyond him to predict any success that composed.” Performing with the :Th%re is a consistency ‘in :Kuerti: his ) dut of necessity, this will be a very “; they, might have. !Because- he is. gradually accompaniment of the bassoon, oboe, . * subjective review. Sitting two inches from_ ’ clothes and personal appearance are ’ -removing himself from teaching he is not horn and clarinet, Kuerti emphasized the the elbow of a world-famed pianist and comfortable but not luxurious; he has actively encouraging 7 young talent. One unity of -the. group rather than making recently switched from using an expensive concentrating on music which was often. - artist who did come .up in our the piso a soloinStrument backed by r :and prestigious Steinway piano in favour of so complex as to be beyond my ,reading* conversation was pianist Adrienne ,’ ,wind instruments. . c *skill took all of my_ effort, I cannot give ,. -a cheaper Yamaha grand; he transports Shannon a teacher at Toronto’s Royal his piano-himself in a c+tstom_ built ,blue , ’ an overall impression of the concert :The Mozart was lovely but the Dvorak I Conservatory. “She has played for-me van which he has had for eleven years and because I was working so hard at my Quintet, a’much longer work played after several times. She is really very good;” little part of it. I barely remember hearing is ‘now falling apart. In none of these the intermissio_n was enchanting. I got so Shannon had performed in one of the I aspects could it-be said that he is overmuch beyoni the piano. carried away by the iomantic beauty of; Conrad Grebel noon hour concerts this jndulgent or self-aggrandizing. The concert was very much like our the piece,-+especially in the Allegro past fall. ’ ,I _ h rmovemenithat I almost forgot to turn rehearsal except for a few minor Much pf this simplicity-isin line with his Kuerti, like many other classical concert decisions, made just- before the the page several. timesThe work is one 1. social and political awareness. Kuerti came pianists: does some composing himself. “I of contrasts, moving ‘through. slow and performance, to play the complete Piano to Canada in-the mid sixties from the L haven’t had much time to work on rn-elancholy passagesinto the frenzy of\ Quintet in A by Antonin Dvorak rather United States partially because of his. . composing but I would like to do much gypsy dances. - ’ \ . than leaving out a few of-the repeats as disagreement with the American policies more of it. ,Pm focusing a’ lot on concerts had been planned. Kuerti is a master and on the Vietnamese War. Since-coming to I I though3 it was a great concert. The now and that takes up a great deal of my knows exactly what he wants from his Canada he hasbecome widely-known_ audience must have liked it because ‘it time.” Although not work&tg on another instrument and-his colleagues. During musically but is active politically as well . drew the performers out three times,to .-i recordingat the moment he said that he the rehearsal he had stopped only briefly although he won’t be running for any receive applause. Watching from ’ “might, like ‘to do the complete works of to-suggest a greater lightness in certain - backstage, I-enjoyed watching Anton and political office. He is a pianist first:‘He _ ’ Schumann someday.” These Schumann passages or to alter the tempo slightly. 1 the other performers-defer says, “I regard Canada as my. permanent to each’other pieces would -be roughly equivalent jn scale During the performance I noticed that home but I wouldn’t run for anything. and try to make the’others,preceed them ’ to the cycle<of thirty-two-Beethovan these changes were executed properly, Mostly because I’m not a Canadian citizen. to the stage to take, a larger share 9 Sonatas which Kuertrrecorded and for (not through my own perception, I consider myself here permanently but I’m. ,the applause. Each person thought the’. ’ which he won a Juno. These thirty-two because I was too unfamiliar with the ’ still a citizen of the United States.” He others deserved more. . sonatas were played in W&et-loo last year i music and was occupied with other explained. that “It is difficult to get across in a seriesof eight eve.ning concerts which business) because- Anton would begin to I As soon as the concert was finished Ithe United States border as much as I I were received with enthusiastic reviews; .smile to himself. Kuerti raced to his dressing room and , want to if you are not a citizen, and The Beethovan Sonatas are “the largest Kuerti plays intensely. I-Iis eyes are rapt -- changed from his velvet black tuxedo especially if you are a former citizen.: \ and most challenging cycle for the,piano. an’d shirt: ‘He was with the music that he plays.,& he plays - into his grungy-cords Sitting slightly uncomfortably on a low I They are the best a pianist could take on.” the \ slower movements he hums the - . *just a normal person againi although one chair Kuerti tested his piano which had I 2 Despite his achievement: Kuerti is almost with extraordinary talent, and I had _ - -. melody to himself in complete, self-deprecating, “Very many pianists have just been thoroughly tuned that afternoon survived my first public appearance not enjoyment. His thin‘ face flushes with the taken it on. What I did was not unique,.” in .preparation for the evening3 concert. much the worse for wear. It was a -- H energy that he contributes and his hair, Although he\had not played on that In reviews and-articles’on Kuerti; he is particular piano-for quite some time his often compared to-other great pianists years-of experience and fin Iy tuned , f _ uch as Brendel, Arrau and Horowitz. He hearing made him’ sensitive F o a. slight says thabsuch comparisons are “fairly fuzziness-in one note. Immediately he’senseless,- whether well meant or not.” crawled, under the piano and began to tap ‘Half facetiously he added, “Of cour& it and adjust it in order-to correct the depends what they say about me.” Later, problem which w&s not evident to most of -in elaboration, he added “I’m sure that the musicians and stragglers who were there’s a competitive aspect to my work. I waitingaround for, the rehearsal to begin, _ think there is-in every field of endeavor. Everyone wants to be the best but Ku&i takes ‘great personal concert in the -” quality of his concerts He delayed’?he competition is, not the main goal.” He 1 rarely makes-a poi&,of going to concerts concert ‘as long as :he couId to try and by other pianists unless they happen to be -correct the. off note~al@&h he ultimately en the I ’ friends and says, “I:m not much of a had to g&e up just+$efore 8;0_0 w concert was about to b&in: Eve li after . listener to recordings either.” the concert the- false’ note bothered him Having no-particularly ,faqourite type of although he wasted r lo,more t6re trying -to music and many favourite composers, he correct it and’instead packaged up his says, “I have so much to choose from, I piano and loaded it-into-his-rusting van. ’ w. _ might as well play the very best. I don’t Most of this work he did himself with great. play anything that I don’t personally,Zka I proficiency and speed. Although the stage don’t do anything, that is second rate.” ’ crew doesn’t often mo,ve grand pianos I - ’ ‘Celia Geig& there ,<_.i was no>fumbling uncertainty , of ‘what.
with
4
I ,’
.-Chamber.i0rchestr-a the- interview...‘ , .-
-
\-- \
J.ii I.
.
’
!
\
\
/
’ -
gardener, and confronts him with the fact, ,/ The premise is that Chauncey G.ardner, a ~ found himto be a sympathetic, sad character. Chauncey is_slightly surprised -that he should (not unlike Chaplin’s tramp). Perhaps it is a man well into ‘mid&e age?’is-forced for-the first time in’ his life to fend for himself after the j be stating’something so self-evident. matter \of identification; although Chauncey ’ Which, in a -way, brings up an interesting owner of. the house in which he has lived dies Gardner’s background focuses attention on \ technical question: how much of the character and the house is sold. Chauncey, wlio’tended, his. reliance upon television to the point of , * ’ ‘.. the old man’s garden, spent (all of his free time ’ (or, perhaps, lack of character) can be making it ludicrous, the theme of the film is all I attributed to the acting skill of Peter Sellers watching television (setsappear to be located too real. ’ ‘\-1 : (who, apparently, is up for ‘an Oscar for his , all over the houchor, beforetelevision became Consider:. there has not beena time inrny wide-spread, listening to the radio; and hadportrayal of Chaunc’ey)? On, the way home Ir ’ life (and, I would imagine, most of yours) when ’ , never been off the grounds. When it came time from .the theatre, I overheard two’ people the television hasn’t been around. It is, as. the I to leave,, he found himself totally lost in the ’ aFguing that question: one person thought that . movie suggests, uyquitous. How has this there was#.no great amount of acting involved ’ world outsider \ . Being Thei-e is the often hilarious stoT,of , ’ because there wasvirtually no character while \ , . Chauncey’s’ adventures based on a novel -by the -other insisted that- restraint in charactec ,Jerzy -K&in&i. The screenplay, also by . ization can be just a difficult as complexity to- /‘* _ _/ / Kosinski, is, at‘times, brilliant, not wohuch in the *actor. (r I the characterization of Chauncey, who is one For my own part, I-believe that Chauncey of the most straightforwardLcharacters to hit H G$rdner .was effectively portrayed by Sellers; It was,with delight that Idiscovered dance at rr his chhracterization was consistent with the the screen in recent years,, but in the Waterloo is alive and well. For .a dance characters around whjch he revolves. ’ character’s background and was entertaining.0 program that, is noted more for its academic Much, I, dare say mosf, of the humour is I cannot see.what more a person could ask of than performance orientation, the student derived, from the fact that, whereas Cmncey an actor; even if the character is meant fp be workshop presented last Friday night provided 4 is really rather simple and totally open and. simple,in nature, it is not necessarily true that some pleasant s.urprises. an actor needs to-work less to portray it. - honest with .a11 the people with which he The mainLstrength of he program was its interacts, they interpret what he says ashaving , .,, A,minor disappointment was the acting of widz,variety of dance sty ‘res. Within just over - great meaning. “I like to watch,” he simply says the other ,p&ciples and most of the minor an hour of leaving my ho,me, I had experienced - a number, pf, times, yet nobody takes the characters (with the exception of the old man works ranging from earthy jazz to Oriental played by. Melvyn Douglas, who deservedlyL “statement at <face, v&B; delicacy. The ymajority of numbers were All throughout the movie, Chauncey- tells _ has the’ other Oscar, nomination)., The performed .‘with. confidence and polish no simplicity of Chauncey had to be countererd people he is a gardener,, asks to work in their doubt reflecting copious rehearsals, by the ‘complexity of the pther characters, garden, talks :about gardening and .gives the 5 something which workedi but not as well as it ‘A few dinces stoodabove the others, mainly.. general impression of,. being ’ a gardener. couldhave because the other characters didn’t When, finally, the doctor (Richard Dysart) of due to outstanding character portrayals. From the moment Libby Darvill bounced on stage in the, old man (Melvyn Douglas) whose wife - seem anything more thancaricatures. Just as well; perhaps, that Chauncey, as the - ’ ‘her slightly oversized sailor suit andflashed- her (Shirley McEaine)- befriends Chauncey realizes that he is,‘as ‘he has been saying all along, a. major character, isalloted the’most attention. I infectiohs smile, she had the audience in the I
‘,
’
J
S&de&s , &cellenc~
exhibit variety /and in. dance~&&shop
7
/
.
,_
5.
8 -L
>.
-- . I I <
I
.
i’
, ,
_
- _
_
.
_ .
.
changed our perceptions, of the world from that of other generations? (Pretty drastically, I believe):How many‘of us have opted out of life, -preferring, instead, “to watch.’ As well as being an entertaining film, Being There is a very serious comment on today’s society. To Kosinski’s credit, however, the message doesn’t intrude on the. audience’s -enjoyment of the film, which opens tonight (Friday) at the Cinema in Kitchener. ’ Plan on Being There. ha Nqymk , _ , ’ ;
,
.
“:
s---
I -
palm of her hand. As her feet rapidly beat and . flicked to <he traditional Scottish music,’ she remained a bundle of energy that was ever so eager ‘to’ please. Elissa Yu Chun Wah also impressed with her “Moonlight Blossom.” * Working in a traditional Chinese style, she handled ‘the yards of silk with grace and dexterity, and brought a special touch of fluid fragility to the role’: “Nostalgiayi was brilliantly c performed by Gabby Micelli,,and plunged the audience to a depth of emotion‘not previously experienced in the program. What could have been a mere caricature of a former dance style was transformed into a subtle tribute to Russian culture. My surprise at the-variety in the program was rather ironic, as 1~myself am a student in the dance-department. The sad fact is t&t while. the workshop may have reflected the interests and unique talentsof individual dance students, it was in no way characteristic of the department itself. For years-the thrust in the dance department has-been toward traditional . ballet and introspective modern. The yea& performance has always suffered from lack of breadth. i _\. * 1 ’ It is to be hoped .-that the variety -and liveliness of the student workshop is an indication of the direction in which Waterloo’s - dance department is headed. In “Music Boxed,” the toy-ballerina broke the shacklesof tradition -and found brief- freedom in new ‘movement styles. Will the dance program ~ -/allow a similar rout&-One can only hope. .I i j . ,. Qlleen Kiueger j
\ 1
-, TheArts,
- Re~ods with and -dependent upon’ each other. Surprisingly simple idea, but there aren’t many artists who can make it work. . Take “Making Plans For Nigel” for example. Young Nigel works in a steel plant, and if you look beyond the song’s>vocals you can hear music that sounds remarkably like the constant repetitious, rhythmic movements of factory machinery. Partridge’s “Helicopter” employs clever guitar, bass and percussive effects that gives one the impression of whirling, continuous movement. “Life Begins. at the Hop” is the perfect pop song for a dance, and the little “boys and girls” voices and the stuttering tells you that this is a church dance where the kids are “too young for the bars.” The deceptively simple melody is just right for deceptively simple kids. All twelve songs on Drums and Wires exhibit this integration of words and music to some extent. Yes, this is pop, this is great pop, but it’s also an example of what is needed to make great art. ‘So ydu missed XTC and the fabulous Fingerprintz in Guelph or you didn’t-feel like shelling out nine bucks and driving fifteen miles in a blizzard? Cheer up bud, ‘cause XTC’s come back to play Bingeman Park in Kitchener (will wonders never cease!) on Tuesday March 11. Tickets are a mere $7.50, and if you don’t show up for this one, Johnny Rotten may be a grandfather before we get another half decent band around here, ‘cause there ain’t nobody likes to play to empty seats.
Marianne Faithfuli Broken English (Island)
--
Several years ago on an old Midnight Special re-run, 1 remember most painfully watching a virginal, rather pathetic Marianne Faithful1 barely whispering the words t_o“As Tears Go - By.?’ It was a sad performance. At the age of 33, cleansed of a heroin addiction, free from .Mick Jagger and done with sweetly sentimental songs, Marianne Faithful1 has re-emerged with a caustic, at times brilliant debut album. She is no songwriter. Her lyrics are obscure and often non-directional but it is not what she says that impresses so much as the way she says it. As a singer Faithfullburns. Her searing, straining voice hotly echoes the pain or joy or guilt in her songs. Raw emotion is rendered with a torchy frankness. -, A few renowned musicians, Steve Winwood for one, provide the competent if introverted back-up necessary to showcase the uniqueness of Marianne’s voice. This sleek and minimal musicianship adds further dimension to “Broken English.” I Whirring synthesizer and a strong, repetitive bassline characterize the danceable title track. “Brain Drain,” written for her by her punk musician husband Ben Brierley, deals with the parasitical nature of loven$ationships while “Guilt” is a psychological relevation of Marianne’s own insatiable appetites. Even though she feels blood streaming through her veins, its not enough. Like a curious child, she wants more, more, more. The fantasies of a frustrated housefrau are tenderly evoked in “The Ballad of Lucy Jordan” and John Lennon’s “Working Class Hero” gets tough treatment but the tour de force of the album is the final cut, “Why D’ya Do It.” On this shatteringly lucid track, -Faithful1 proves herself as decadent and raunchy as her former Rolling Stone. Sung r with a scathing vengeance, it explicitly reveals the wounds of sexual jealousy. Appropriately demented lead and screaming horns support the vicious vocalizing. With a sharp and smouldering toughness, Marianne Faithful1 has come of age.
Jason
’
l
~. ‘- ._ .- ( Birch 7,198O.
Friday,
Ed Kurek Solomon Burke Sidewalks, Fences and Walls (Infinity)
Sometimes a good voice can transcend mediocre material. Sometimes. Unfortunately, Solomon Burke cannot do this on his latest album Sidewalks, Fences and Walls. Burke’s deep, gravelly voice cannot arouse interest in a rehash of warped standards nor are the jazzy horn arrangements exciting. The whole album seems to have an unbearable heaviness to it which derives from the incessant beat of monotonous drums. Much of the album, especially the first song“‘Yes I’Love You” sounds like a variation on Ithe sound track of Star Wars with a noxious disco tempo. Burke is a good singer but a better selection of material would be a great help to him.
Mitchell
Celia Geiger
TOWNE 597 Lancaster-St.
SPECIALIZING
r Mike Rutherford” Smallcreep’s Day (Charisma)
Over the last couple years or so the members and ex-members of Genesis’ have _ been doing solo work to such an extent that the band as a unit is being fast forgotten. Peter Gabriel’s third solo album will soon be released, Phil Collins is working full time with Brand X, and Steve Hackett is probably still wondering what went_ wrong with his first solo effort (a disaster). To join his counterparts, , Mike Rutherford, the band’s bassist and erstwhile guitarist has offered Smallcreep’s Day. . Drums
and Wires I=,. (vlrgm). \ I ask myself should 1 put my finger to the left, no I &k myself should I put my finger to the right, no 1say it really doesn’t matter ‘bhere I put my finger Someone else will come along and moue it It’s just a complicated game
Ya, it sure is a complicated game, and XTC has finally learned the rules. They’ve got their collective pointer finger on the perfect formula for producing innovative, intelligent, catchy POP-
The new streamlined XTC’s greatest asset is their writing ability; both Colin Moulding and Andy Partridge have the ability to produce l songs wherein, the lyrics and the music are inextricably intertwined. The songs don’t just, 1 ‘fit the lyrics anivice versa, they’re integrated
/ THEGRAND St. W., Kitchener
0.7444
Lancaster)
the
FOOD
-
any Tuekday with pre*ntationof your student card.
LONDON May Departures from $419 June Departures from
$449
One-WayDepa<rtures
$275
No on6 undersells
Every Tuesday: Summerfest Zfyou chn’t go Sduth for the winter, come to Huggy’s Summerfest!
_ 6 Bridge
W. Kitchkmk from
’
- AnyDeparture...
Night”
lzvp-y Wednesday is Huggy’s Variety DON’T MISS IT!
down
from
Monday: Strip
anq
IN’-FINE MEXICAN
.-
With this first solo release. Rutherford has’ done a superb job not only in writing and executing the songs on the album, but also in assembling the other musicians whose talents and style match and surpass those of Genesis. Rutherford’s guitar work ranges from joyous ringing to crying pain and is simply beautiful, but leaves plenty of room for Ant Philips’ keyboard wizardry and Noel McCalla’s voice. The excellent musical dynamics and technically flawless performance is most evident on the title track, “Smallcreep’s Day”, a 22 minute epic (shades of “Supper’s Ready”!) about Smallcreep, a worker who, after spending forty years in a factory drilling holes, sets out one day to -find out what is at the end of the assembly line. The opus flows like a symphony and rhythm changes are triumphant in their
“I-kggy’s
Grand
(reg. $1.90)
We Play the Music YOU want to hear!
,
II-
fortitude. Perfect for those who recognize excellence. Side two is toned down a little and includes -“Every Road” and “Time Again,” two tender ballads, and “Moonshine” (no relation to white lightning) which has the religious undertones that are common in Rutherford’s lyrics. In general these are not nearly so tasteful as side one, but the flawless instrumentation remains intact. _ With Smallcreep’s Day, Rutherford has captured the essence of Genesis, but with a much more expansive style. It is something to be savoured alone in a warm, dimly-lit room. . Unfortunately for Mike Rutherford, .most , -people prefer vesch like The Knack. The unappreciative may find this album drab in spots, but Genesis fans will adore it.
(Up from the
,
Imprint
Show
-
’
CUTS,
we guarantee for more
inforqatign
contact
the Student
it. Federation
offi-
or
Canadian- Universities Travel Services Limited 44 St. George St., Toronto
l
979-2604
-
.
’
night ptib croyd more than hearing Buri&onJs Nothing &Uld h&e plea&d Thksdtiy Oh-No’s.:do i( their way. Theilc way. was. raspy, intense, painful td Iwatch, lacking, in cc&x.mcmts, but with bqlgkg eve$ qnd neck sinews, lovely &sjointed.Iittle bpss riffs aiid a lead singer1 @i21 Wood,.a&ove) who see%med bn the-point of collapse. . r I photo by . Katherine Ia _ I _-, d b..
I 8 Taking ajob with a big ;--+ computer company c&n be ‘: . I, b1’ . the first step toward obli:: vion. As a beginne_r, it’s : easy to get pigeon-holed or \ I lost in the crowd., \. . , / At Wang, hoeever, you’ll get a chance to be a. stand-out from the start. tha/t we”re q small 1,’ . ( It’s‘- _ not .. ! ’ 1’ .
company (l&t yea; ,we .--’ %Qnimizing~papei\;;orK sold’irvei’-$400 ri-rillion and-‘bureaucracy, and in worth 68 word prbcessing -giving everybody the “and computer equiprrient). ’ xhance to see his or her> The point is,,w’e think _) ideas tur! -into products. new- blood-and, young ’ In‘addition, \ivel,lI give you ideas are as vitAI as explenty of opportupities for perience. h .:&dvancement in whichever’ We also believe in careerr path you chose - ,, _ .
- &c,hnical; or management., f: you’d Hke to work in a b ompany-where you? __ successAepends on ydur -own energy, brains and -/ ingenuity, Wang3o,uldb6 ’ ‘,u,;t what you’& looking , drnd vice-versa. , c 5-2‘I.: !A.‘,‘. ‘. : ,f L.
,
,
\
i
_ ,,’ ,/I
I-
, Il!i II
.
.
.
,.
Ill
“,..A
f .
c
. x ‘/
.@1@30
Wang
\
Laboratories, Y
Inc.. Low,ell, MA 01861,
U.!+A.
,-
r-.
,
-/ ’ I ., -
,
’ :,,L ,‘.’ -<.I __ ;,- ’ .,
’
‘_
._,
,
7, t
.
Wang? represen?at“iveg will be onkmpus on“March 11,lqSO. To arran .ean interview reqist,er’with the Pl,acdment 8 f.fiCe. Iflthe scheduletis full @ease call&usan Mors& collect $ (617) 459-3236or send her your j
--
I
/
/
.,,-.
. .
. . .
o
.-..
_ .
. . .
.
/
_- A .c_, 6 1’ \ ‘*.l \
z
L-
’
,
. -.
.
.
\
I
and devotion. now. . . and forev;. .
I
,-
‘>
,I
.
‘4
-.
,
.
I
,, r’
/
Ill -
.
\
-.
’
III
./ 30
KltiG
71.
KITCHENER 7
t
/ .
.-’
>
>
Ill
.-..--_.-..
_
resume-as -* .soon * i)s possible at ti&iabOratories, lnc.;One Industrial-Aven.tie, Lowell;- k MA 01851. Wearean affirmative-actioii d -employer. i . ij I _ I ,, : , ;’
.
I .
/
-
/. .
_\
.”
,’
““...o’
. of your deep !;ove A glqw to light her heart
\ /
c 3 d
‘.->L
.
i
_
CO ah041 nnn’t h&i hark. Wnw Mnm u.2 UIILUU. WV.. . ,.-.---... -.-.. . ..-... on her day with a, diamond dazzler. We offer a ,..,#.A. ,,-.l,.rr;n” ,c .4;,rrAw4 rinnc- nine /
Vy.
’
II. ‘> ‘r,
-‘-.(
/ +--\ / _L_ ,
\ -‘,,
.
,
.-a
\ .
’
.
. I
-
A ^I
\
I
Western 74 Guelbh 69 -season. - Y Mike Hyrbj Cqnnected on an the face-of a&&r&y,” a traif the ’ The Windsor Lancers &nGya&h 89 Lau$iw b5 Windsor t&e&d three clutch eighteen footer which was to be L&i by Dan Berry who hit 11 of 1 fir;‘m,ed their position atop the,, ’ Wgrriors have displaq@ @l year. ‘Liurier coach Don Smiths baskets by &ytre Stan Korosec., the Q-ypbons’ final scoring play. 7 feel sorry for’our graduating wds a big -boost;tr oi the 16 shots from the floor, the O_U+A West regular. +aSon ir;l the fin?! tpr,ee’minirtes of <the players. They’ve lost three fivals M&tangs played ’ their entire -2 standings by defeating the In ‘the pr&sureYpaqked final Feiised play’off format but his game to eliminate the gritty ,1 Waterloo Wprr;iors 75-60 in -‘in a row>one to l&rier and now ’ team, Irue to their season roster and upset the Gniptions. _ .,,mjnute, Smith, a solid second two ,]to Windsor. But I still Mustangs. Korosec, who totailled the penultima’te game of the h&f perfornier, msde a great I ‘L,-!_“,“!FF,. Acentre ~pet~a~d”,~“, record, looked very much out ,,-p#.k A - .- -:-r.., UII IW II:- I’ +Lr.LI-IC c;mml III iai ‘&;,mk. LWCI iry consider this a su&psful year league playoff tournfment of place in this mis-Fatch. . block of a Ninham shot. Vance p’qy? ?r”y ‘~rr”“U’~ finished with 19fpoints because-of the way they hung in last Sunday; Wit6 Rick ‘Dundas in fiistI Tiiy missed a couple but &IS fouied ’ Jemalnlng GryPhons appeared *\ there and turned’ the season ,1 rebounds, whil? vetqran ‘For the spectators, the by Mark.;ScoF with five sectinds- --spent by thew tough lo!ss of/the half foul trouble, the Gry. guard Vinee, Lan@y, a.:~j, previous nighL. 1’ tournament -format was a - Bround.” phons r’eceived atfine effort p”‘nt left. -He made onei free throw, siback throughout the tour- \ Tournameqt gam&s proceedRick Dundas sty.! ggled m& rotising ‘ succe+s. Wit’h the from sixth man Mike l-iyrb qzm2nr-* .a~l-, - -l-a-AI?4q’ , palnrs L -:2*: ~ ‘then Gib Chapman -Iled timed .m . . . . ._ SC ’ exception of-- two expected i ed as follows: who shot 9-f&1 3 from the mc. )ugn .I&- rnfs *,!- ._.A ^a.2 --#.. was ari III~GII~G routs in the f,irst round, t&e floor- and totalled .a gamematcC Vantie coolly made the second~h~~‘~~~~ imFini Western 64 McMa;ter 62’-3, it proved go be merely -a calf. +l@b games were taut and- exciv high -22 ,points. Mike Sesto - .----- Tar t-- wnar -,J”-r #was .-./a iu Li. ‘free t.hrow and, with, Ray, went +; , 1 c . . ~ .. ‘. curtain-r?Jser ‘. This err&-filled loss to the ‘3 pomrs,.3esto and t$slii, _ ing. What wa’s, at times, - r- tp cobe? Hyrb,: de inl+und / nacadded 18 aild Dundas 15 for __-_ .A ---L 14 eacn. licking in at&sti“c ejtecution, Mustal. rigs ’ ’ ’ Ine*‘- - ToUr’ r- n -r’aenJea Guelph. Bob ,Fitzgerald had C0me’ _ ’ passer Two Grypl%oh~ broke_ >% “---..A---I--, :- *I.“I* .~UIIIU, . ...-aplace (\liarauwrs a- piar;G 111 LI IG &de fr& Berry’& 2~ was r&re ttian c@npensated 18. points and’1 0 rebounds td . , ,’ w; wlob 6; Guelph fT7 .’ the Mustangs receiv&dbalanced , for by the intense effoi? by all semi-fihals. ’ ’ pace Laurier.: “Our task wai clear. We were : contriblitions from .ten piayers. ‘, Rookie-- centre Ross -Hurd playgrs on a!_l teams. The @s a ,Thi s pre&re-choker bVaterloo 83 irock 3dl .---A -LAI-r-A,,‘.. Haviti lost the seini-final, .-this format was a one.year expe;’ hooped 13 first half points m-s. v, lodkiiig foysfive se_cond inbouhd microcosm WI 1VVULGI IW *25~6vidlation so we out two rjeoele namefnmivahlti had lit& meanhnd guard Dan Berry ‘added rimental model and will pro-,l%is was almost an instant. son rBoth- teams seemed-v;? . $2 . on Hyrb,” recaljec! McCiae.’ “if -~~‘~~‘~~~‘~~;ofls:“’ 12 to st;!ke Western to a 35repl a y of the Warri o rs’ sea’ _*I----*-A L-e,,’ . bably ,u ndergo some revision tight as me,conrew oeyar~~ar~u~~ ’ _ tie gets it in,l we foul.imtiedi&ly ’ ~Win~~o~ jg w&er,oh &.1 ’ 24 lead aTtei twenty m\ihUteSSon-ending. rOUt Of the-Badbefore next season. , was over_ two minutes befdre - and ._h$e ‘.they mi& the free The:Waterloo Warhiors-were 1 That ma/cgin evaporated as ws. Evev player on‘- the Rick Dun&s pxed the fi’;s’ Midtidy throu&h,‘the first ’ .J ‘throw.? I McMaster opened the Second roster hit the\ scoreshee’ :I. I-much closer tb winning this Tar basket?Qundas went ~h,to scdre --’ The half, the War@& held‘ an . II.A”AG 15 _- fir: -_ result w&s’ better than tournam&t than the final score ’ half with” a 14-6, burst ,but,, Waterloo as the starters Lvt;l @‘half points and w&the could have hoped. The. fight POiJlt lead.,Th&n, aS he .with four-and a half minutes hl_ ---a -a Lc,“,#.” as-- C..,i,L - M&ae of the championship kg&me _. . .., -. -- coacn --I kl,re&ed in anticipation of tooghdominarlr ptmc+rr~Gr UUGI~I I naa agamsr vvesrern, . ined his left, the vustangs had built er games to pnmn Thn ‘,-St= _my, , a_ A,. ,... I---, -LLI -_,__Hyrb: Passed short, _ . _. would indicbte. W$h five min3L-LL leaa aner nnrenry _ luckless 1homas’ comb Nipham- in?&&%d, ,and, aiertly another ‘safe-looking led, lolled up a M-76 indinn .a m. &es lefi, to, play, (they trailed . . -v rAni .VYVU..U.. -- :A- Ites. minus called. timie‘.out. Four seconds, Windsor by ‘a poiirt, but foul rfj’ -49. ._ 7 . e&e and’ the Badbers madek, ‘TT ley su;drised,,--usl’ with - a ’ shoti bn & clock . 3. /’ / the Matrouble and fatigue did them,in. . LTo their- credit; things easier for- them with 29 _-rsljrea which isolated -- d off&e’ Molyneux, Phil’ Hermanllt7/ . . ..-..---. Especially fptigue...The War= -rauders never gave up. Three turnovers. _ --“I wss going-to s&t up a trick . --..--Dtrndk s&h ~Mc.in&&.” ..-/:--, ___*_ -Don--- in -,-shnrl ‘ ~ Rri a n -Unnsri ‘“11” WI I”. I archespoint .plays by (Marti Duboik riois were ihvOlved if? an exci,tinQ -Doug VanCe tOSSed in nine Of Crae. ‘-We ,got into ‘eaily foul (play but both, ‘Doug, and ‘+ytrated & Vin&“g&, brought I the eleven shots he‘tried for 18 and exhausting semi-final qame andPhil Tamburino and some mour (Hadwe@ want,4 the ball. trobble ind had to go into 8 zone Wir@or back, They closed with a with Guelph Saturday and ,when illTtimed errors by Western / Points- Brian Ray added !6 defence befbre we wanted to. Their strategy was better tha? rush; o&wring W&erlm 248, they! .had 110, Tea&h down fyr brobgh,t Mat back into the points. and Rich KUf?Z 14. W&<ot rattled on defence and mine. The inbound pass wastd agd as&bed a 4+36 leaa after \ somethl_ng j-extra against th& 1 bontest. go to Ray iho wou‘ld pass to twenty minutes Seymour Mawen dished out 7 that affddI/oUr off&e.” Cancer&there: was nothing left y,bn Tamburino converbassists and rese-we guard Tim whichever of them,tias open.” But after ,the dispiriting first - ‘Wt3 got pla$ng too fast and to drawrmpl.” : a. : ’ ’ @d a one and{ a bonus Harrold ‘hit fouy:.con&utive half &e Warriors reacheddown Ha&&n had a step on his man, ’ lost ,our _tead II’ I\?cCrae com“Our. pia@s ;otalied tt&mshot’sfrqm the flab; and totalled _ and’ :camb up with: took Ray’s p&s, and launched a situation with 32 seconds fo m&t&C” We ’ vver+ pid<mg up she& &id coach Dot$&Crae. pray,, t@ Mjstaws led 63-.- ‘11 hints in onlysix minutes of their b&t kffort , of the giire running -twe$y footer which - some rea’ching, hqcking -type ‘We had to play,,behind fo? 80’ I 62. .Mac p.ressed, regained Swished -through ‘as tirn& ex-season. Th&v effectivelv defm rls arki sinn we .’ ’ .w.+.-,.“‘.- that’s .. .I-- -a‘ “J” __- were ---.-----__ - - --I , -possession on ti turnover, b’pt minutes against Gue@h and ., fenced Dundas, ie&ting him pi@. c get&g stretched out.” / ._ ..*. I- .I,- ---_1-_11-4$ ______- I s--CL..“r--r .a.L, &,,I, :;..--m . .I.Bob .A. Blasko I c ‘and CI Terw I - pigs, . 1~m0uririo, wj i o LOOK i ~pui l vvlnasor. vve neeaea Continuous naa iu eacn_lror BrocK. . to v baskets and a f:y throw Miraculousl# the Warridrs Thb Lancers maintqined a 52clutch performanoes-an@we got himself to win (or lose) t@ hindsor 78 Western 74, before he fouled outwlthsixand L had assumed their orily lead’as 44 lead thr?ugh the-nine minute them for 75~@buti%. But .that’s a game, could, n9t connect, -pn a /half minutss to play. mark of the second half. Vancel, th& game-ended. For H@wen,’ /-,$&I :di@culg driving I&$ups, Thq Lgncers cad a narrow dr+&ing wa$~FcY@@$‘~,+ ,. Meanwhile, led by Doug who spent much of this tournawho had <an excellent 13 kie Y:‘&e second’ Bs.ti&e exdred. - es&&against a t&aF which Vana who.had.lg points inthe While admitting’ -disappoint-’ ment in foul trouble, it was only first half, spun inside,‘converted Western h,ad &caped with a had given them ment, McCrae praised his team a -a-..lm-lot Of latter twenty minutes I tfje War- I his mend bask& of_the &me, Hadwen’s pass, was fouled by _’ trouble dur:Lm ‘*kc. II ly II 1-G IGyUlCll ’ ,for its “tiillingn&s to contin‘ue in- two .point tiictory. riors p&ed awav at Guelph’s , but his-Genie of time and-place ,Molyheux, and. made the free lead. When Dtindas~c~mmitted. has’nev& ,&en better. throw. Ray therf ,connecte&on a . ,his fifth j&l, Clayt Ninham baseliqe jumper and a short shot This‘ game”marked the emo?rted two’ free th,rows and t-tonal oeakof the tournament from ,the/centre of the lane and, !rloo @ailed‘ 5349. In the and thk draining eff&t on both ’ ‘sti&nly; IWaterIT trailed 52- ..,;en.s$ng thi@ minutes, ’ two _ _ ., teams was to @ obvious the ,151. ,baskets by vance and one by .hy. / ., I pg 14 * I ,.W Brian ~.Ray cancelled two scgres 1,Two’s were the ord& of&d .-’ iOdrn and ’ wai rebarded - the earlv pace, Klevering was- _ bv pertet Smith ‘and:dne by. Mike day when the- Uhibersity’of \I \ivith a p&sonal best of 2:55,1 _ &ble -tb withstandAms-f -’ Sesti. *A technical foul was Waterrooq competed in the a,nd g silver .m&dal. The 600m den’s furious charge dowin, c&d on Tom -Heslip; \iance, OWlAA lndobr Track, and ,, featured an in’tense battlefor the -final straight; Amsden made the frge throw and)the Fiekf Championships at York_ ’ secbnd between Klevering nipped Kleveiing. at the I&t Warriors retained oossession; and another Wateiloo runner ,,second, last wGekend* _In a two-day running 1:35.3 to ; Ray’s short jumper biought, I meet, ’ team- members recorded o,ut’sttinding jndividu= al r.elay pet-forinanties -fo finish -se&d to West&n in the battle for team honours; Westerti finished the competition with\ 140.;y)oints: whale Waterlooscored 84 pbint+_ * FqlloWing irr’ order we,re Tqronto (66 point@; Queen’s and Y.grk (25 points each), Windt. so; (13 points), ‘McMaster (1 Q points), and Carl&on. and ’ La&entian,(8 points e&h): ’ ‘ How did th&y do .it? By &mpeting in multiple &vents -and cirrying ,off *an itiprecsive collection of ri?ed@s, the”&heriqs -managed to &feat ‘every team in the piovince save,Weqern. ” ’ I Wtiterlob’s individual Fins ’ came frqm Sylvia Maldadey and Faye -Blackwood.‘L Ftiye won the 50m i,n 6.56 s’ecopds, and ran the 300m in 38.88 to sei a new OWlkA recor_d- 5s well .as a* person,al be$. Sylvia se? a persqnal +ecord,of-5.71 m in the quali1 fyi’ng.round of the long jump dri F&fay night; after break- ing’ through’ ,the elusive 5.70m barrier-Malgadey proceeded to crash throughAthe 5.8Om. barrier. in th& final with ,tier leap-of*.81 m. a: Waterloo’s \ - ne ” _points came from a seriesb 7%- @cond and third place finishes. Rina Klevering went after West_ ern’s Jariet -Dick
tes,
5 outto seturjin ill-f&&pl&
.
~“1IIzI‘
t
Imu
l”
‘-
-
-’
down
boufi
l
*-“IO
perhaps,
plal@g time.
‘_ -
following
mn’t-on
.l‘&!tIDNIGHT3H~~
~ATtrRDA~tiAFKIyHth~ A
.
.
,*
L\
-
I ;-
;
. I
n.
/
-
-0
j_ .
LESS THAN
‘i
A 1.O;IHINUTk
WAi,K
F-flOiUl’YW
A@
WilJ
.
Watertoo;Co4p ’ 280 Fhiljip &., Waterlob, Ont&2L (519) 884-3670 r
rooms, centrallylocated near Rloor & Spadin; close to subway; buses, shops, restaurants and Uof -- T office: 1Qs Spadina Road, Toronto, Open 6 PM 17- 9 PM Monday - Noon - 5’PM Saturday-Phone .’ , I .‘\
-
‘-
+ ’
Residence~ihc I . 3X1
-
-1’
Qntario Mk2T - Thursday (&6)] 925$420, .,\ ,
.Africch
*..
Students Associa& tl
.
-~ .
U&&y
of Wat+&o
SL Wilfrid Laurier
~ni+$-sity -
.
’
-\
Theme: The Development of the African World; It’s polticall Social and Economic Realities. Spontirs: African Students Association, Federation of Students, CUSO, Y, University of Waterloo Administratioq’and the Graduate Club. ’ For more infortiatiop-Phone eu&k&386-8263 or‘884-8929. - ..F- . ’
,
Sa&day, March 1 s;h ‘lb6 - -- Room 113, Campus Cerd
.-
’
-_.-
,-
’ .
_
. _
12:00-540 irn Display of African Art and Artifacts _*
-,
_ -.
,
, -
‘_
’
Mr.Nwagbugbo, Business Consultant, Kitchener. \. _-
Chairman:
._
Speak&:
_
-
4
2:OOpm Op&ng
Dr. L.A.K. Watt, Dean of’ Gradu&eStudies _-- ,_ \’. Speaker: .Tanzanian High Commissione Topic:- The Liberation of Rhodesia , \ r -\’ - -- 2 9 &06pmSpeak& -Professor Warner, McMaster ‘+. I University 1.;* . - ’ Tdpic; J&e Role of Litera&i&z&d. ,-++ Education in African?- ‘- -p .. _- ’ Development , i .. ; CoffeeBreak : ,. / - ,. _/ /
. .
+‘.
.
con? froj)7 pg 13
,
-’
,
’ ~tytly,$eteafter, Ray ti& - in his own- reb&~nd to n.egate two free throws by Hogan; Moly- . - neux scored on La&y’s re. bound but -Ninham @i&from‘ , fifteen feet; 56:55 Windsor, with SIOB - _ to play-, Thomas called tir+e‘outarid -rk +bstitu@d Korosec who had - been. given-a brief rest. _ i “I $rd to_y&lat tl%m,“Thomas . r*a!led-IateTWe were stand- 1’ ing around playing -Waterloo% i wa : stand . : - \’ game - &ICI. wheri around, we get smacked.” i (‘-His lecture was not lost on his charges. 1Landry and ~ Hogan scored from_ downtown and a. - tenacious _Windsor defence forced sever@ Waterloo turnT.icyers. Korosec’ scored t,hreec@-r. secutive baskets, one, a- three . . point play, to put the Lancers up / - -. ’ ’ by 12 points with 2:33 left. * ‘Then. we had to foul peo$e - L ‘7 :down the stretch and thev’re _ r &ocl free throw sho’ote&~ said - . ‘i McCrae, “I thought Korosec and l&dry made the difference. .’ Korosec stayed&control for the ’ yhols game and he rejected: severarshots. &clry's~c&~~ess~ , bs the,keai_to their offence.” _ : -’ he-Laqcers’ scohig v&s veqf U$alanced: Korosed 16 points (and . 10: rebounds), -Land)y &arid Her;‘mar& 15 each Molyneux, 12, Ritchie-and Hogan &I each Wanceiias again outstanding -5 lfor Waterloo wjth 22 points and/ . . 12 rebouryls. ‘I’ve, never seen a L , $iayer - have a better tourna-* ment,” s&$ Mc&ae. “His tena‘city was- amaSng%and it rubbed ( off on ‘me@&& &&“i;e > Ray, added 76 points’ and 8 I .’ , - ,,.~f&bmdsq Hadwenhad 6 points *‘<and 5 assists,. but hia effect-. -jveness was cur&k& by -two_ offensive , fouls- early - in the I .’ c second half which gave him four -, , for. the game.I McCrae’s final ‘kudo -was , dimctq.4 to the .Waterfoo.fans: _ ‘7hey &~ck%ith~ us this year - -when we were going badly; The St \ ?_ . res~~se wasaNvays good and <h ’ its a pleasure% be involved in a _ , >like that.‘!_-@.htii --
.
I-
.,
,
J
I ..
!
1
: _) :^ ‘.
I Jam&-Allen .‘ii._’ <:-.- ,-,i. \
._
_L *, _ ’
-. ’ -_ \
Mr. Peter Omara Ojungu Professors Felix Lutiand George Khnroda TheKenyaModel:IsitaSuccess or a Disaster for Africa?\
,\
--
Professor Linda Freeman ‘i African-CanadianRelations _ ’ and their Impact’on African __ - -Development * CoffeeBreak
. _ , ;
;
NigerianHigh Commissioner ’ AfricanDevelopment _ , 2”‘; .,I;;3; ,T-.-*c;:. 1‘> .r.. : :r ^. ; ,,‘;Ld ^ - .3:OOpmSpe+er: ‘- - -:;- ‘.’ Topic:
\
..
,-
,
&do pmSpe&rz
Zimbabwe-African National Union Representatives in s . C<ja \ 3 + , Topic: Zim.babwe from the’Insideafte the February 27-29 Elections / < I \ h’ rc
A.N.Okafor. .j I (FoundingMember ASA) > Ogbu Blues Construction Inc., ‘11 - Toronto-. ,: :’ _ _ _490 pm Closing Egboka Eseanyaoha, -. *‘\ - Remaiks: President ASA, Waterloo j I -’ “4:OOpmVoteof - Thanks:
.
-
-C
.
_
\
,I ._
-_ ,
, \.
Free -. ’ Great Hall, Campus Centre
Admiqioq: Venue: -i ,
,
* - ‘Room5136 $l.OO,cash bar 8:QOpm _
- .
’
I _ Admission_: .: 1% Time:
J
_
,
~
.
\
-
Music j ‘ RecqpGon/African/Disco Veye: Math + Computer Building, -
\‘
,8:00 pm Film Show based on the AfricanWorld z
I .
- Topic:
?2%Kl -_fim&peaker: , ’ Topic;
Address:
4
--
l~pmhaitman -
_ -,.’ _
-
2
-
I
\ .-
. r
.-.-d
-
._
--.
\
.
-’ ’
,
\ _
c d
,--,
-\
I .
.
-’
, 1
.
. I-.
_.
-.
-.,-
4.,
_
_
_
\
_
--.
_
,
,,
.
,
-
_-i ' .T : \ f' . .with a victory-‘in the 6bbrn peting for th’ezeam next fall is noon. _ _ I -- .\, Men’@ Cotipetit& :’ r Cn_the sprint, medley, Fpye __ , .. i , ,I vyoild like to take this “Blackwo(jd ran the 400~ le,g race an? a ,thir.d place finenc’oura$ed to-York out this i / finish seconds a&ad of ti;le-’ Basketball opporttinity to wish all playoff ’ in 556.2, Rina.Kleering ran ish‘. in the 300m race. ,ln i summer f and .‘shbw up at veririg’s third-plade 135.5. . *addition, Forpve clocked,an . Seagram stadiQm come S&p%teqms good luck ahd to thank .‘The relay ‘teams- raQ ex- ’ hey 2OOin, 27.0, Andrea Page i outstanding 400m timd of er;nbe,r.’ all’ teams -for the excellent , ,+Lbiise Adamgon tremely well; both,,the 4~20,~ {~~~~faa!y ‘,5;8d f~ir$~~~~~ 4.80 in the distanc_e medley.. i. Tom Boene t(erm in hockey.,A ,number ‘of-. upsets’ OF ) and the sprint medley tehm ran the &O in 2:14,3;*‘tb .Friday etiening. Other notab3. -.-- M&‘~~~&a~~~al curred in first round, play df ’ IWen’s Competitive +broke the&Id OWlAArecords, finishes were k a)i Costello.. , ’ the yen’s Competitive Bbsw but ran second to Western in co_mbi?ed time of 4:03.3 was 1~ I, -Hdb& , ‘_.’ Floor- Hockey . Mark lnrpan and Gary Hutch: ketbailleague/ The major b both races. The.&QOO team .lesT thafl-a sesonc! 6ff West,D inson, placing third, fourth’ The A leagues have been The men’s competitive Floor -upset in B league wtis that of bf Andrea Page, L&lie Estdecided l-and the rankings are y and sixte. inthe 15OOm event, eV?hsee4’if$nd-place fini& Hockey league’got off to a fine -the 21st ,ranked team, the/ wick, Faye Blackwood and NitikV,Bolton placing Sixth -in_ inl They’ are 1 through 6 6s. came as a delightful shock to star&. In the Suprei’meleague: the 1 Saints tiat the fifth ranked , Sylvia Malgadey ran 1:41.8& the athletes themselves; Lisa . the 3OOm race,- the 4xGOO fol,lo/ws: St. Jeromes, Co-tip, ‘Old Timers destroyed the Coteam NFG by ‘a scdre of 75.J , A&den insisted tha_t .she relay tea-m. of I.nman, Boltorl, Optometcy Flying Eyes, $ciop team 1 O-O. TheJemaini _g. q. ‘The Saints on-Mr. 1Q are ‘, Dave Wylie and N&m Waylie lence ‘A’, lViath.>‘A’ and’l&gindouldn’t bglieve ’ her ears gamesfound S@ar Force / ‘i&o-\ flow scheduled ;to play the wheelshe heard it announced ’ came in fourth,, the ?distance eering. ThiS,wouId leyd,orie tb riousover:Free Radicals5-1 .;The first rankeg- team 516’s 7:3Q , / medley’team of Ihman, For-, believe that,St. Jeromes will I ’ that Waterloo had .finished Rebels deflated 5th Divisioti &l pm on court 1. The remaining grave, Hutchinson and Cos-win -Ithe tit!e ,but in ’ this st&ond. Ihdooi, coach.Louise and the final upset was a victpry j wpsetg iq first rotind play ’ ’ ) Adams& insisteb that-“the .‘teliO aIS0 fhiSh,d foijrth a@ C'OllVenOrS OPhbn, tcOLOp k - for’the Hu~ngous'No~ ovei were: St. Paul’s over St. !” Ed Ny@and finished sixth in likely .to repeat ,their &am, placing should have cpme as Skin Friction,+l . The&p scorers Jemmes Bl 36-25, Dina. , pionship performance of .‘the s in league play were O’$eary and no sbrprise. The-indooi teain !he 50m. $ick, 38, DesigM Force 19, In th? -final s&dings the 7sfaH term. The first A PlaYoff Chris-Lions with 9 goals apiece, Moon Units 39, Mueller’s ,’ ’ -consists bf three .athletes teae placed -fourth *&ith \$O games areThursday, March 6 ,(Blackwood, Malgadey, and &five&Harold Schroeter pr& Maulers 33 and Rugger Bug- , Estwick) who .are among th& . points, Toronto (140) took the’ when, soief% Will -f$C~~ Of4 di& that ink this division Shear hers ‘over West 4 53-26. I ’ tpp ten.in the countiy in their -title with Western (120)’ and :‘-ag$inst Math.“A and ‘Engin-, Force and the Old Time& will / In c le,ague-The ‘Dyrr3mick e\ients; three 1 others (I$&. Q&&s (87) follbwing. That ee’ring will dire1 it, out wi& ..fiiht-it out f& 1st place-i equals Waterloo’s. Optometry. hi B not too’m@ “ -In the Pbjitical ’ League ‘only $ank 11 th) had a tough ‘game and Page) - p?acing Vering, Anisdea Z&JS ’: is decided vet @aim look for outdooi performance in the -are hiohlyranked’ in the ‘twio teams have play&l. The.’ against the Zug‘lsland who were ranked pth. The ” Shear Force (5-0);Nprthstars W\‘NFC over+weied the Pm,r -fall as well as last year’s . province. The entire team has (4-O-‘l ), Maple Buds’ (3-l -,J,) Factor to \hrin +i. The St. fiFa’ sco!e.was a close 18~ 15 _ indoor standings. . trained hard and competed or Fxplo$ion (3-l -1) in the ’ JerOmeS team bat the Crem de ?“FOQ’~ fdr the DYnamlckS’ Maintaining that placing Jwell. They are all. no’ Play resupes for both B and C , was a credit to a fine’cr,op of semi-finals or the finals: My . la Ch&‘in overtime mien, 3-2. - nonience’ competitors, and leagues on Monday, March ” rookies who .-filled ’ in -for _ Ijredidtiops for B %hamps ’ that has .made dealin&with In this divisioh M&Cleaiie wastop l,. at 7.30 pm I Would be fO; the korth&rs ’ scorer ad l&thedivisioh vyith a sever’aI’q?perienced ‘athletes - /’ them; qothing but pleasure.. -.yaterloo(Nil1 lose Klevering I *who chose to:take-the year off L on the strength of their 27 taal ‘of 15 goals. m,e prediction In A league,‘Tiny Toddlers, on the!? goals, despite Shear Force’s J and Malgadey -this’ year to &hool to concentrate ,in this league. is tbl@h bit Running d&Is. Flyers and I graduatiqn; 1 only hope that tiaining. Hopefully’ after a - 5-O -reqord. The B playoffs r’umo& has -;it, that \Wally’s the Outlawsare stilj in the W qrriors will -reet VWVFC in running. sweat . and toil’ this *~begari Suvday,, M%rch. 2 a,nd ,$ve can find adequate r+- ,,lit$e Come on out and.‘ ,\ I the team wi!l proye playoff-schedules for both A. finat play. 1placemdnts for them.j’ \ sunimer support your team; -i. to bea top contender th’is fall: I and -B leagues -were ready \ # ,’ ,,- Iti the m,en’s events, Mike Mike For-grave ~. ’ .\( I , I F&grave led the, Warriors . \ Anyone-iriterested in cbmThur’sday, -February 28 at photo by al&i Adtirnsbti
cQn’t from pg 13
’
\
\
York Uni’v&ity ‘-, -Faculty of FineArt& .
\ a
- SumnW SttiWs-in $ideAfls’ -A, , J61yS-2to+AU&St 8, 11.980 .- /!I - - 4. , .
lhtensive
credit
and non-credit
Univerrsity courses
in
Dance, Film, Music, Theatri, and Visual A$s are ’’
bffered during the daytime.:
A f$odliction of theCrpative Diiected by SIJS&I Fortest
A&
Board,
Uqiversity I
of Waterloo L
Thur$day; Mill&h 13 - 12 non Friday, March 14 an&* 5 Sattrrday;March-15 - 8p.m.
?&&ts &SO (Students/ map l
c&e (10 or mm) ‘. , %
‘<^._,
, ‘.‘~~~~,‘““~
Seniors $!..m)
$2:00) . _\ ,
__
x
-9
/+
-
’
:
.
* + ~
,
From lJw Arts Centre tix Off ice, Rbom uw 254 1 ,885 Modern B,tlg 4280Languages *,
*
_
_ t.
-
-
I 1
GMAT+‘MeAT INTENSIYE +EMINARS ,We GMAT
offer 200
0
70 eacq
l
timtnbi-sized.
’
REVIEW -C “ 4 -
for each MAT:
and
~ l
pziw
. L
of
the-
copyrighted
LSAT,
page’ Math Primer LSAT
l
- specialtid-lnstructors
l
-Guarantee: . no extra unsatisfactory
& GMAT classes
lserit &gistra,nt)
,oj our;8 track recording ‘studid, ‘disc jockey ser&e and tap~xluplicating seA&e as well a.s&ganizitig fundraisi~proje~tsfo~thestdion.SaZarypiusco~missio;. @&se-submit antipplicaiion in-writing to CKMS-FBd,&r&r Warre~use,‘Universitybf_Wat~~l~ Watt+&, 06tario?lZHGJ by Mar+Jth%&&qreinr fonzlCl~npeasecaa(~~9)~~7~~b,~~~u~. i -” 1 <- ‘.-, . , .-_
.
.
*
-.-
* -. -
_
,’
*
r
‘.,
/
JNAHAL-@BYFILM
-/I
’
’
.
*
to
A-
r~pegt~the course for charge it your score-is _
I&y not give us a Eall and .find out how--you can tealb do the preparation LOU keep thinking you’l get acound to on your own? ,: National Testtng Centre, I& 4609 West-10th Avenue, VanCouver, B.C. V6R 2J3 ’ (604)-689-!Jow or - _ call us tol free at , (&-to) 663-3381’ * r- . LT I
- Special,htrodtictory off&I I . . ‘4_ :
t
cu&utum
-